Help-Portrait Charleston was Awesome

Today’s Charleston Help-Portrait event was a little on the cool side (cold for some), but turned out to be a pretty successful event. It was very well received by the people that attended the Without Walls Ministry Christmas event. I was told that there were about 200 registrations, which meant that somewhere around 400-500 people got their photos taken. As an added bonus, the rain held off until after we packed everything up at the end.

I spent most of my time manning the laptop, editing the photos and printing them, so I didn’t get a chance to see much of what else was going on with the event and don’t have too many photos of what went on. I did get to see the faces of most of the people when they got their photos though. The looks on everybody’s faces made being out in the cool weather worth every minute of it. Made me feel really proud that I was able to be part of an event like this.

Not surprisingly though, there were a few glitches to deal with and there were several lessons learned, at least on the printing end of things. Because of the way things were laid out and the threat of rain, we weren’t able to have the cameras tethered to the laptops, so there were memory cards being shuffled back and forth by volunteers between the photographers and laptop stations. Not ideal, but workable. We ended up putting the cards along with description sheets into envelopes for the shuttling so that they would stay together and not get lost.

Portrait stations

We had 3 portrait stations set up and three laptops/printers for viewing and printing the photos on. We were only able to get two of them working though. Even though printing setups were tested by the printer owners beforehand, there were still glitches once everything got set up on site. Perhaps the cold had something to do with it. The first printer kept insisting that one of the ink cartridges be replaced, even after it had been. I spent the first hour or so wrestling with getting the second printer to print 5×7″ photos before finally giving up and switching to 4×6″ prints. That put me a good bit behind the photographers, so I had several stacks of memory cards to import images from while trying to get things printed. It also meant that people ended up waiting longer than planned to get their photos.

The printing ended up being a lot more chaotic than I expected. Memory cards coming in and going out, editing and cropping photos before printing, keeping track of which prints go with which ticket, people gathered around to see if their photos were coming out all made things pretty hectic.

Printing station

I did get my first experience with Adobe Lightroom. Pretty impressive piece of software. Too bad it doesn’t come in a Linux flavour. Another thing that held up the printing on my end was that Lightroom seems to prefer grabbing the RAW file over the JPG image. RAW images take quite a while to render before being sent off to the printer. It also takes a lot of memory and caused Lightroom to crash a couple of times on me. For future events, make sure the photographers’ cameras are set to take only JPG images. Makes things go much much faster.

Lesson summary from the editing/printing side of things:

  • Test the printing setup at least the night before. Then test it again.
  • People bringing printers should also plan to bring their laptop (or at least bring the printer driver to install on someone else’s laptop)
  • Time permitting, get together before hand to make sure people manning the laptops are familiar with the software being used to edit/print the photos.
  • Tethering cameras to laptops is probably the preferred way of doing things.
  • Shoot JPG rather than RAW. RAW takes too much time to process.
  • You probably don’t need quite as much ink as you think you might. Of course if you get what you think is enough, you’ll probably run out.

Chaotic and crazy as it was, I loved every minute of the event. Looking forward to doing another one in Charleston.

1 semester down, 9 more to go

Actually I have no idea how many semesters I have left to go. Part of that depends on how many courses I’m going to have to take. Guess I’ll need to work on figuring that out.
Wrote the final exam in my Biomaterials class today. Think it went ok, although as usual, most of the exam ended up covering material that I didn’t study quite as much of or quite as thoroughly as the rest.
There end up being more on biomaterial and tissue interactions than I was expecting. I was still able to pull out some answers out of my brain, although not in quite as much detail as I might have liked.
So, first semester of being back in school has been interesting. Fitting it into the work schedule hasn’t been too bad thanks to some work flexibility, but has still been challenging.
The most difficult thing so far has been getting back into the habit of actually remembering the details of the material I’m studying rather than just remembering the general stuff and where to find the details if I need them later.
The down side of going back to school while you’re working is that when school’s out, there’s still work. It only gets a little less busy.
Well, gotta pay for school somehow I suppose.

Where’s the spell check?!

While writing down some notes studying for my Biomaterials final, I couldn’t think of how to spell a word. I wrote what I thought it should be and waited to see the squiggly line to tell me that I spelled it wrong.
On my pad of paper.
I think I’ve been spending too much time on computers.

Dinner with friends

Brought friends with me to Friday Night Dinner at Ted’s Butcherblock and had a pretty good time with Yaenette, Theresa, Clay and Kenny this evening. During dessert, Clay and Kenny got distracted showing off their cell phones to an older couple next to us, Theresa and Yaenette started talking horses, and me, I just happily polished off my dessert. This week’s meal was pretty good, especially the shrimp. I don’t think it was quite as knock-your-socks-off good as some of the previous dinners, but still pretty tasty.

Caper, Olive Oil & Sweet Lemon Marinated Grilled Shrimp / Roasted Root Vegetable & Baby Eggplant Caponata with a Fennel-Tarragon Pepperonata Sauce / Parmesan Creamed Rice / Orange Blossom Pistachio Cake with vanilla Thyme Crema

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Melody’s Happy Tail

Yay, another happy story from one of my former foster dogs, Mel.

Dear friends at Wild Heir,
It has been a year now since we adopted Melody from your group, and wanted to let you know we are doing great!! She has really come out of her shyness for the most part, and is a joy to our family!! Enclosed are pictures, one at Sullivan’s island, on the beach, which she loves, and the other with my son’s dog, Izzie. They are best friends, love to wrestle and play tug of war as you can see.
We live in VA, but out son lives in Charleston, so we were there to visit last week. I wish you could see her in person, you would be so proud, as we are!!
Thanks for taking care of labs like Mel, and providing a place for families like ours to find a wonderful dog. Keep up the good work!

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