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Pugly Pixel

Roy G
iPhoneography, Photo Tips & Tricks

Putting Your iPhone Photos Together to Tell a Story

The big news on the social networking scene this past week was Facebook’s $1 billion purchase of Instagram, a mobile photo sharing app used by 40 million people, me included.  Lots of people are up in arms over this and think Facebook is going to kill Instagram.  There will certainly be changes over time, some for the bad but maybe some for the good.  Facebook isn’t the devil people, it’s just a social network, not life or death.

But this isn’t a post about the future of Instagram, plenty of other people have covered that extensively.  This is about continuing to take lots of iPhone photos and using Instagram as a platform to collect and share them.

Sharing individual photos with Instagram has become a major part of how I tell the stories of my everyday life. But sometimes, pulling together multiple photos into a collage is an even more powerful way of telling a story. You can group a collection of photos with a similar theme or share the who, what, why, and where of a special event as a single “storyboard.”  Check out Susannah Conway’s beautiful site for an excellent example of this. She hasn’t said a word but just by looking at this series of images as a whole, you feel like you know what she’s been up to.

There are a number of tools that I’ve used to create collages with my iPhone photos.  And, most of these work just as well with non-iPhone photos.

From the iPhone or iPad

Diptic and PicFrame are both great apps for creating photo collages directly on your iPhone or iPad.  They have very similar templates, work basically the same way, and cost the same.  So for me, this is pretty much a toss-up.  You can’t go wrong with either.  Both allow you to export high-resolution photos which can then be shared out through Instagram.  I created the image above using PicFrame.

From Flickr

With Instagram, you can easily share your photos to Flickr.  Once the photos are in Flickr, you can use a program like Mosaic Maker from Big Huge Labs to create a basic grid collage out of individual photos, photosets, or tags.  I used this last year to create monthly summary collages of my 365 project.  I don’t really use this much anymore though because all my photos aren’t in Flickr.

From Your Mac

First, if you’re taking lots of photos on your iPhone you’re using iCloud to back them all up, right?  Good.  This means they’ll already be on your Mac in iPhoto ready to export or do whatever you want with them.

I use Adobe Lightroom to organize and manage all my photos.  It’s also where I do 90% of my editing.  One of the things you can do with Lightroom is leverage the Print module to create collages because you can “print” to JPEG.  This excellent tutorial by Jay Watson shows you how to create a diptych with the Lightroom Print module.  You can easily extrapolate this to create whatever type of collage you want.  And, you can save any templates you create for future use.  For example, I used Jay’s method to create the collage I used in this post.

Photoshop though is the clear winner for me if you want to get really creative with photo collages.  It might be a little more work but the results are worth it as you have complete control over the design.  To make life A LOT easier, I highly recommend checking out the photo layouts by Pugly Pixel.  She offers some photo layouts as freebies and others for a very nominal fee.  And her web site is loaded with tutorials on how to use them with Photoshop.  Everything I know about designing with Photoshop, I’ve learned from her.  The collage of Instagram photos that I used in this post was created using a Pugly Pixel Photoshop template.

Finally, if you don’t have Photoshop or Lightroom but have a Mac OS X 10.7 or later, you can get the wonderful PicFrame (same app as for the iPhone) from the App Store dirt cheap.

Creating collages not only helps to tell a story, but, as a bonus, it also saves you LOADS of time when you’re trying to include lots of photos in a blog post.  Inserting a set of images as a single photo in a blog post is so much less painful than trying to insert and align numerous images.  Much less painful.

Thanks to Nanette who asked a question that inspired me to write this.

Inspiration

Inspired To Do a Little Spring Cleaning

Well I’d be remiss if I didn’t acknowledge that I’ve had a facelift.  A blog facelift that is.  Mom, dad, grandma, and the handful of you that stop by regularly have surely noticed the change over the past few days.  I’m sorry if I made you dizzy.

Those of you stopping by for the first time, well, hello, and welcome.  It’s a new year so the site’s got a new look.  But then you’ve never been here before so just assume it’s always looked like this.  iWeb?  Don’t be silly, I never used that.

What’s brought about all this change?  Well, I guess it’s all about why I put the time into this thing in the first place and how those reasons have evolved over time.

When I moved to the UK several years ago, I just thought having a “blog” would be a good way to keep in touch with family.  I didn’t even know what having a blog really meant.  At the time, I just thought it was posting photos online with little writeups saying “Look!  We did this!”  But in the early days, well, I never really embraced the blogging thing.  I did the best I could but I was working a demanding job and getting around to writing up a post felt like a chore, something I had to do for someone else, not for me.  And posting 4 or 5 times a year really isn’t going to do a great job of keeping your family in the loop never mind get you much of a following.

But having my little man and the opportunity to take some time away from the corporate treadmill I’d been on for about 20 years, well, it’s opened my eyes.  It’s allowed me to visualize a more creative life and it’s opened my eyes to world of interesting and inspirational people who share their stories and life experiences online, writers and photographers.  Until just a short time ago I had no idea these people existed.  Seriously, no idea.

And it’s because of all these amazing people who I’ve come across that I’ve been inspired to make this space something more than just photos of our latest family outing.  It’s inspired me to create something that’s my own little piece of the Internet where I can nurture the creative side of me that’s been dormant for a long, long time.

One of the people who has inspired me on this journey is Susannah Conway and I’m taking her Blogging from the Heart course.  And last week she inspired me to revisit some of the design elements of my blog.  It needed a bit of a tidy-up, a little more whitespace, and a cleaner, fresher look.

I also cannot say enough good things about Katrina at Pugly Pixel.  Her creativity and sense of design are just brilliant and without her graphics and tutorials I couldn’t have come this far.

So welcome to the new space.  Take your coat off and stay for a while.  I’ll put the kettle on.

I’m always interested in constructive feedback, so if you’d like to share any thoughts on the new design, please feel free to post a comment.

Iphone Processing:  Shot with HipstamaticLibatique 73 lens, Blanko Freedom 13 film.