At Home with Tech

Unlock the power of all your technology and learn how to master your photography, computers and smartphone.

Category: travel

Consider Adding in Blur when Editing your Photos

Where once you could only find your background blur when you snapped a photo, now you have the luxury to create and position it later when you edit the image. I did that with this photo I took in New Orleans.

Unwanted blur in my photography was always my kryptonite. Getting a clean freeze of any motion drove my creative process. Finding background blur (what the pros call ‘bokeh’) was always a ‘nice to have’ upgrade.

But when Apple added ‘portrait photo’ mode to its iPhone cameras, that commoditized bokeh to the point where anyone could easily create background blur. It’s a nifty software trick that generates a narrower focus point on just the subject in your photo’s foreground.

And this type of software muscle can help you control the focus point in your photos even further. In fact, it gives you an amazing amount of creative control after you’ve snapped your photos.

It’s also a tool for me to fix or hide a problem in plain sight within a photo. Here are a few examples.

Blur Out the Background

My family and I were taking a walk at Calf Pasture Beach in Norwalk recently, and we passed by this tandem bicycle. Something about it appealed to me. So, I pulled out my iPhone and got the shot. It wasn’t in portrait mode. So, my iPhone couldn’t quickly blur out all the people in the background. But it was easy to do that in post using Adobe Lightroom.

Blur Out the Foreground

I didn’t like the person swimming in the foreground of this shot, because I want the viewer to focus on all the people fishing on the jetty. So, I simply adjusted the focus towards the background.

Blur Out an Unwanted Element in the Middle

I snapped this shot while on vacation near Orient, NY. I found the two turkeys crossing the road right in front of a car. (Silly turkeys!) I love the moment, but I didn’t like the license plate detail being so prominent. Sure, there are ways to mask it, but the plate would never look totally natural. Here, I avoided the problem entirely by simply narrowing the photo’s focus point and blurring the entire car.

Direct your Viewer’s Attention

If you’re not just trying to fix a problem, you can be free to get creative and add in some blur to help define what’s most important in the shot.

I liked adding blur to the background of this shot to help you focus more on this tiny rowboat heading out into the enormous ocean.

How to Adjust the Focus Point in your Photos
I add in my photo blur using Adobe Lightroom’s appropriately named ‘Lens Blur’ feature. I prefer using the ‘Cat Eye’ Bokeh setting. Then, you simply use the ‘Focus Range’ slider to adjust. (Note: You don’t have to be working with a ‘portrait’ photo.)

You can also adjust the focus point of an iPhone’s portrait photo. In the Photos app, go into edit mode. Then, simply tap on the subject you want to focus on. (Note: You don’t get the same kind of control as Adobe Lightroom offers.)

Use Blur to Give your Photos more Clarity
Don’t fear the blur. Use it!

Whether you want to add more creative flair to your photography or minimize an annoying element, generating some targeted blur can be just the solution you need.

Why Vacation is the Time to Take Care of Business

Nobody wants to pack work for an upcoming vacation, but you might want to bring along some big questions. Here’s why.

I know that vacation time is when you’re supposed to really disconnect and recharge… Absolutely. Spend time with the family… 100%. Catch up on your sleep… Of course. Don’t think about anything… Well, not necessarily.

I don’t know about you, but my little organic CPU normally works hard to keep all the trains in my life running on schedule. Whether for work or family, there are countless details to constantly keep track of. Decisions. Calendars. Deadlines. That’s modern life.

The Big Questions
And despite all the help and efficiencies that technology (and now AI) offers us, it’s not necessarily getting any easier. We’re spread thin. Lots of balls in the air.

We have to prioritize what needs to be done today. Then, tomorrow. Then… later in the week.

But what about the decisions that can affect your life next year or into your next decade?

And that’s the problem. When do you find the time for those?

Well, I must admit that I can have some difficulty carving out brain space to ponder important details for the more distant future.

That’s where vacation time can help.

Create the Space
A little time off will usually give you permission to clear your head from the daily static. Is it best to leave all that empty space alone and let it be? I imagine many would agree. That’s the point of a vacation.

But I think it’s also an amazing opportunity to do some really good thinking.

You’ve cleared your mental plate from all the usual distractions. Now, you have the space to consider some of the big questions. And if you do that, you can start to really take care of business.

Yes, you’re doing work, but you’re working on you and your life. I’d say that’s a pretty good trade off.

You and your Universe
There are any number of ways to properly position yourself into this thinking state that can generate inspiration.

It may be at the crack of dawn with your cup of Joe. Perhaps it’s at the pool with a margarita. Or at the top of a 4,000-footer in New Hampshire.

That’s the purity approach. It’s just you and your universe. Nothing else. And then the answers (or possibilities) can start to materialize.

Sure, I’ve had some of those moments, and yes, they’re magical. But they don’t always show up, even if you set the right conditions for yourself. So, you might need to also set up a more traditional approach.

Stay Plugged In
As much as vacation is the opportunity to leave behind your daily routine, I also like to bring along enough technology to allow me access to my day-to-day details.

The last thing you want to feel is cut off.

So, yes… I bring along my laptop. I make sure I have all my necessary passwords with me. For better or worse, I process much of my life through any number of online connections. So, it’s helpful to have continued access as needed. (Some may be able to accomplish this solely with their smartphone. I just like having a little more visual real estate to work with.)

I think it’s simply about creating a new space for yourself that’s sufficiently tethered to your old space. Fresh but familiar.

Clarity in the Gift Shop
There’s nothing wrong with leaving everything behind, and not considering one single big decision other that how to enjoy your vacation.

But if you also have the opportunity to quietly focus on parts of your life that need a little work, that could lead to the best souvenir you could possibly find.

Clarity.

So, when packing for your next vacation, don’t forget to bring along a few of your big questions. You might just come home with some answers.

My Photo Essay of Life by the Ocean in Maine

Whether connecting to a moment of celebration or a daily activity, the enormity of the ocean and adjoining shoreline dwarfs our existence. Here’s my collection of photos from the southern Maine coast that explores our relationship with this ‘waterworld.’

If you live by the ocean shore or vacation there, it’s inevitable that patterns of life will be drawn to this unknowable force.

My family and I recently spent some vacation time in Cape Porpoise and Portland, Maine, and I had the opportunity to practice my photography by the water. I looked for examples of daily life and how people had modified their activities to reflect their proximity to the ocean.

Whether through work or play, people had, of course, adapted their existence to fully join with their ‘waterworld.’

Here are some of the aqua-influenced activities I spotted. (And please allow me some creative license with my wording, as I’m having a bit of fun with my titling nomenclature.)

Walking the Dog

Going for a Neighborhood Walk with your Friends

Taking a Long Bike Ride

Learning the Ropes

Parking the Car

Talking by the Water Cooler

Commuting to Work

Experiencing the Enormity

Action!
I tried to focus on the action of these moments to help visualize this little photo essay from our time by the Maine shore. Hope you enjoyed it!