Create Your Own Photo Blog
ByCreate Your Own Photo Blog
Photos exist to be shared
Whether you seek to showcase a professional portfolio or just want your family across the continent to see the pictures from the reunion, you can do it with a photo blog. Catherine Jamieson, whose award-winning blog, Utata, has a legion of fans, gives you all the tools you need in this richly illustrated, full-color guide. She translates Web lingo, walks you through setting up your blog, and provides professional tips on composing, shooting, and editing your photos. Jamieson even helps jumpstart your creativity with 100 photo ideas to get you shooting.
Catherine gets you started blogging in Movable Type
Covers the tools you need to get up and running
* Understand your style and decide on the purpose of your photo blog
* Evaluate Web hosting options
* Design your blog using the Movable Type publishing platform and professionally created, customizable templates
* Learn to shoot, edit, and select photos that work best on the Web
* Create a site to publish projects for your group or organization
* Promote your blog, network with other photo bloggers, and syndicate content
* Improve your photographic skills with professional tricks and techniques, whether you take pictures for a living or just for fun
* Explore and learn from some of the Web’s top-rated photo blogs
Check out the free templates and additional resource materials at www.wiley.com/go/photoblog
Rating:
(out of 13 reviews)
List Price: $ 24.99
Price: $ 3.00




5 Comments
July 28th, 2010 at 3:10 pm
Review by Thomas Duff for Create Your Own Photo Blog
Rating:
Not all blogs revolve around the written word. The recent proliferation of digital photography has given rise to the use of blogs focused on the visual element, commonly referred to as photo blogs. Catherine Jamieson has been at the front of this movement with her Utata site, and she shares her knowledge and insight in the book Create Your Own Photo Blog. This is an incredibly beautiful book that is also extremely useful…
Contents:
Part 1 – Getting Started: Join The Revolution; Exposing Your Style; Finding a Home for Your Photo Blog
Part 2 – Setting Up: Build Your Blog – The Toolkit; The Workbench – Inside Your Blog; The Design Studio – Skins and Customizing
Part 3 – Working With Photographs: The Photographs That Work; From Camera to Blog – Making the Magic Happen; 100 Photo Ideas to Get You Shooting; Letting People Know You’ve Arrived; flickr; Doing Cool Things with Your Blog
Index
Using commonly available and proven tools like flicker and Moveable Type, Jamieson walks you through the process of setting up a web site, finding hosting services, and then using her tools of choice to build and manage your photo blog. Her recommendations involve using Moveable Type as your blogging software, the flickr site for storing your photos online, and the web hosting service of Nexcess which offers a special package for people who buy the book. If you’re already familiar with blogging or web sites, you might find that you have some/most/all of these areas covered. In that case, you can move onto the areas that deal with how to develop your photo blog related to style, concept, quality, and so forth. The writing style is intelligent and readable, so even the areas that may not be relevant to your particular situation are still hard to skip over.
The feature of this book I enjoyed the most was the assistance on how to shoot good pictures. Rather than just focus on the mechanics of the software, she gets into how to choose subjects, composition of pictures, and a number of other items related to taking compelling shots. Even if someone wasn’t quite ready to commit to starting a photo blog, they could still get quite a bit out of the book when it comes to improving the quality of your pictures. Couple that with the ability to put them online using something like flickr (if you don’t already do that), and you’re well on your way almost before you realize it.
I’ll spare my friends and readers and stick to what I know best… regular blogs. My picture-taking ability is nothing to write home about, and it wouldn’t be worth blogging in my case. But should that bug ever hit me and I change my mind, this will be the book I’d use to get started.
July 28th, 2010 at 3:33 pm
Review by G. S. Fallis for Create Your Own Photo Blog
Rating:
Most of us have a secret artist hidden somewhere inside of us, looking for a way to break free. With her book, Create Your Own Photo Blog, Catherine Jamieson gives our hidden artist an escape route.
There’s a growing population of people (among which I count myself) who use the internet every day…for work, for research, for news, for fun…but who lack the techno-geek know-how to actually construct a personal presence on the web. This book seems to have been written just for us. The author gives us easily understood instructions on how to build a photoblog, but without ever talking down to us. That’s very refreshing.
But this is more than just an instructional manual. Jamieson also writes about blog design (how to personalize your own photoblog), about photographic technique (everything from the elements of composition to the use of color), and about basic image processing methods in different applications (photoshop and picasa, for example). If that’s not enough, she even includes a “idea generator” to give your imagination a creative boost.
There is only one problem with this book: the title doesn’t do it justice. It’s not just about creating a photoblog; it’s about establishing a creative presence on the internet.
July 28th, 2010 at 4:13 pm
Review by Bill K for Create Your Own Photo Blog
Rating:
I haven’t created my own photo blog just yet, but holding this new book in my hands gets me really excited about the prospects of doing so asap — and, it would be a great resource for current photo bloggers.
The first thing one notices is that this book is beautiful; positively packed with the author’s stunning and inspirational photos. Secondly, it is loaded with practical instruction on setting up a first-rate blog, or improving an existing blog, including professional templates created by the author. And, I appreciated the chapter on getting the most from the online photo-sharing site, flickr. To top things off, the chapter on 100 photo ideas is alone worth the price of the book. Apparently Catherine Jamieson is developing quite a following, and I can understand why.
I haven’t seen a book quite like this — it appears to be the first credible approach to the photo blogging phenomenon. Its marvelous value and superb execution should make it a classic.
July 28th, 2010 at 5:07 pm
Review by M. V. Smith for Create Your Own Photo Blog
Rating:
I’ve been a blogger for awhile, and never even considered adding pictures to my text. Photo blogging is a great idea! This book is filled with great ideas. Text blogs may be a fad that will taper off after awhile, but I get the feeling that photo blogs will be around for a long, long time. This book will help promote the concept.
July 28th, 2010 at 5:09 pm
Review by Bob Nolin for Create Your Own Photo Blog
Rating:
Photoblogs are a very popular and useful marketing tool for professional portrait photographers. They’re a great way for studios to stay in touch with their customers. With this in mind, I was very surprised to see that this book does not treat this area at all. In fact, there’s maybe three sentences, total, about marketing and driving traffic to your photoblog. (Basically, the advice given is: participate in online communities, and stick some metatags in your code, and wait for people to show up.) The other surprising thing was how narrow the focus was. What we have here is a book about how to recreate exactly what the author created, no more nor less. She used Movable Type, so that’s all that’s discussed here. (The author claims MT is the most popular blogging software out there. Not true. People are leaving it in droves for Wordpress, since MT has no spam-protection, and Wordpress kills spam in its tracks. ) She even tells you exactly what webhost service to use, going so far as to include screenshots of their website. Very odd.
I don’t know of a good book for portrait photographers looking to add a blog to their marketing program. However, two books I would recommend just because they’re very well written and useful as all get-out are:
WordPress For Dummies (For Dummies (Computer/Tech)) and How to Do Everything with Your Web 2.0 Blog (How to Do Everything)