nate update

creative stuff. music stuff. other stuff.

Browsing Posts published in July, 2009

Hi, and thanks for reading. This has been one Hell-Hot summer here in Las Vegas, and things are all shook up! Without getting into the dirty details or getting too dramatical (use ’86 KRS-ONE voice), Black Diamond Digital has gone through some serious changes. Here they are in no particular order:

1. New site. You’re riding the ride. It’s 100% WordPress driven. Feel free to leave comments on everything and let me know if there’s something you dig, or something’s broken.

2. No rush jobs. It’s a quality of life thing. Sorry. No fries with that, either.

3. Yes to fun projects, charitable projects, and helping friends out when they need it. (#2 still applies).

4. Follow me on Twitter. —>

5. Be good to people in this crazy economic rut. Karma’s out there.

Enjoy the new site. Let’s get together and work on something!

Cheers,

Nate

Varaluz Lighting assignments are some of my favorite projects. There are always unique challenges when shooting lighting – reflections, lens flares, wires, prototype issues, etc. Here are a few samples of recent work that I shot for Varaluz. Check out their website and read their manifesto: “We stand for fun, approachability, and originality.”

Here are some samples from recent glamour assignments. They may or may not be “work safe.”

There are other samples on Model Mayhem. Click here to see those.

Sorry to those who were hoping to sign up still. I’ll keep updates on here if there’s a future class announcement. In the meantime, please follow me on Twitter for more updates, events, and piping hot information. Or at least lukewarm, if I’m running behind.

Cheers,
Nate

Special thanks to Ryan Weber from Radiant Photography for sharing this video developed by Scofield Editorial. It’s painfully relevant in 2009. I couldn’t have demonstrated this practice any better. It’s basically robbery, and it happens to creatives all the time.

If you live in Vegas and you work with Adobe Photoshop, you should seriously consider sharpening your skills by enrolling in these (insanely affordable) courses at UNLV this summer. This installment is taught by a good friend of mine, Martin Lapid. He’s THE man when it comes to retouching women.

Photoshop CS3 Workshop: Manufacturing Beauty

Beauty is only pixel-deep in today’s world of post-production image manipulation. Sags, wrinkles, bulges, scars, tattoos, pimples and a number of other blemishes are disguised with a sweep of the artist’s digital brush. You will be guided step-by-step through a retouch of a typical model shot from a recent local advertising campaign and learn the secrets of the pros for taking off years, disguising body flaws, evening out skin tones, whitening teeth, and intensifying eye color.

Location: UNLV Paradise Campus (PAR) Room 511

CLICK HERE TO ENROLL

If you live in Vegas and you work with Adobe Photoshop or Lightroom, you should seriously consider sharpening your skills by enrolling in these (insanely affordable) courses at UNLV this summer. Your instructor will be Nate Ludens (yours truly). I’m looking forward to seeing you there!

INTRODUCTION TO ADOBE LIGHTROOM WORKSHOP

With today’s consumer-meets-professional photography trends, shooters can find themselves managing thousands of digital images. Working with large amounts of software might mean less time to spend on retouching. Not the case with Adobe Lightroom 2. This is used as a helper application alongside Adobe Photoshop, but stands strong as a single application (Mac or PC). Learn to cross from print to web and export top quality images by the dozen with this introductory to Adobe Lightroom.

Location: UNLV Paradise Campus (PAR) Room 511

CEUs: 0.80  Hours: 8.00

CLICK HERE TO ENROLL

If you live in Vegas and you work with Adobe Photoshop, you should seriously consider sharpening your skills by enrolling in these (insanely affordable) courses at UNLV this summer. This installment is taught by my good friend, Krystal Hosmer, an awesome designer and educator who has taught many classes at UNLV and is a very helpful resource here in the Vegas creative community.

PHOTOSHOP CS3 WORKSHOP: CURVES DEMYSTIFIED

Curves (when used with adjustment layers and masks) are the most powerful and flexible, but least understood, editing feature in Photoshop. By the end of this workshop, you will understand exactly what the lines mean and how to analyze a photo to create a curve to fix common photos issues such as underexposure, color casts, dull color, washed out skies, faces in shadow, and a myriad of other problems in a few clicks.

Location: UNLV Paradise Campus (PAR) Room 511

CLICK HERE TO ENROLL

I gathered my mail tonight and saw that my annual AIGA | Aquent Survey of Design Salaries 2009 arrived. I rolled my eyes and thought to myself, “Great,  just what Las Vegas creatives need: a reminder of how much money everyone left with a job in our profession is making.” From my involvement in a various creative organizations here in Sin City, I can tell you that we have a pretty bitter bunch here “in times like these,” since the design, print and advertising industries have been dragged through the mud over the last year and most are still wallowing in it, collecting unemployment checks, bidding against craigslist, or packing their boxes and moving back to wherever they came from in hopes for a new start. (I read today that the Venetian & Palazzo laid off 200 more employees – in the last 3 days).

You might be able to tell, but since I first saw one, back in 1998-ish, I haven’t been a big fan of this Design Survey.* But check this out:  I’m going to recommend that every creative who reads this gets their hands on this publication.  The first 15 pages of this document are freakin’ priceless. Kudos to each of the ten senior creatives who share their advice on what the heck creatives should be doing right now. Some are very Dad-like: “Adjust your expenses,” “Be stingy with your money,” and “Be broadly talented”  – but some are absolutely brilliant! There’s something relevant to everyone in each essay. To my dismay, more than one  said “hunker down” – which has replaced “times like these” as my new most hated catch phrase. It’s so G.W. Bush.

* Look, AIGA and Aquent, it’s nothing personal, it’s just that the cities I have resided in over the last decade are not fairly represented in the survey – Cheyenne, Denver and Las Vegas. These were or are currently lumped into vague “Mountain and Pacific” categories. This survey, our organizations and publications all do their best to impersonate the antiquated Electoral College. Huh, you say? That is, they ignore and discredit creatives from small cities and rural areas. Anyone can tell you that salaries in Las Vegas don’t resemble the same positions in L.A., San Francisco or Seattle. Never has, never will. I will urge my local AIGA chapter to push for better representation for the 2010 survey. Let me know if you need names & numbers.