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Getting them online - Event Workflow

beetle8beetle8 Registered Users Posts: 677 Major grins
edited January 25, 2010 in Sports
This was started to keep from hijacking another thread.

I have one person on a laptop that culls and sorts photos as cards are either delivered to her or picked up by her.

She then starts the uploads to premade galleries on SM right away.

I don't do any post before uploading, I asses images after an order is made and do minor PP on small images, and more egressive editing on larger prints.
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    dbvetodbveto Registered Users Posts: 660 Major grins
    edited December 18, 2009
    I do alot of football so i will add my work flow which is at most times twenty four hour turn around.
    I shoot in raw
    after a game I get home (around 11:30-12 PM) and I fire up my laptop open Light Room then I import to a game folder such as "8-20-09 Rosco Rush" convert to dng and rename them to "8-20-09 Rosco Rush##"

    After the import I first go through and get rid of the junk , blurry, ref in the way, too dark, shots of the ground etc..

    After that I go through again and mark the best of then and filter out the rest then I do my processing (exposure, WB, color, sharpen, noise ) then I export these to send to the Media guy.

    I then do my post processing on the rest and upload all of the pictures to SM.

    Most times this is a twenty four hour period but there has been a few times when I did it in about 5 hourseek7.gifhuh
    Dennis
    http://www.realphotoman.com/
    Work in progress
    http://www.realphotoman.net/ Zenfolio 10% off Referral Code: 1KH-5HX-5HU
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    South Shore SnapshotsSouth Shore Snapshots Registered Users Posts: 140 Major grins
    edited December 18, 2009
    I shoot hockey and post immediately after the game. Here's the simple plan.

    Shoot in .jpg

    download to iMac

    junk the junkers

    send keepers to desktop folder

    batch process in Bibble Lite

    upload to SMUGMUG gallery

    post links on Facebook, hockey forums, etc.

    Last night's action has already garnered 3000+ hits.

    Works for me, though as you already know, sales are only ever here and there.

    Rob
    Nikon D90 | MB-D80 GRIP | 80-200mm F2.8 | 50mm F1.8 | Tamron 28-75mm F2.8 | SB 400

    Pentax K1000 | M28mm F2.8 | M50mm F2 | Takumar Bayonet 135mm F2.5

    www.southshoresnapshots.smugmug.com
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    beetle8beetle8 Registered Users Posts: 677 Major grins
    edited December 18, 2009
    beetle8 wrote:
    This was started to keep from hijacking another thread.

    I have one person on a laptop that culls and sorts photos as cards are either delivered to her or picked up by her.

    She then starts the uploads to premade galleries on SM right away.

    I don't do any post before uploading, I asses images after an order is made and do minor PP on small images, and more egressive editing on larger prints.

    The above is for gymnastics,
    I shoot medium fine jpeg on a D300
    At venues with Wi-Fi the images are up before the customers get home. I have got sales from the previous session while I am shooting the next. if the images are not up right away I am losing sales. I have watched photo views of over 3000 per hour after larger events, and I'd say 80% of my sales come in the first week.

    BMX Racing I shoot in RAW Process in LR and Upload asap usualy less than 24hrs then it's off to FB and the forums to let everyone know they are ready.
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    Rocketman766Rocketman766 Registered Users Posts: 332 Major grins
    edited December 18, 2009
    I'll jump in here...this is how I do my cheerleading events....

    I shoot Raw on CF, JPEG (Large)on SDHC.
    Every 5 or 6 teams hand off the SD card, images are loaded on to the server for everyone to view onsite.
    As soon as I get home, I load the jpegs into LR2, ditch the bad ones, then upload to SM.
    I have my galleries set to 5 days delay to allow me to PP the ordered photos.

    I have a pretty good amount of "after event" orders.
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    SamirDSamirD Registered Users Posts: 3,474 Major grins
    edited December 19, 2009
    Set up the camera right. Some guys do it so well they can shoot jpeg. I don't trust myself THAT much, but most of my workflow is just cropping, converting, and uploading.

    This is for sports. Portraits are a different story!
    I've got about the same workflow.

    Wow, such a great thread! How many of you are solo in the process? How many of you have assistants or help?

    Here's my process:
    I cover anywhere from 1 to 5 events in a given weekend. Each event will have at least 150 images. Most will have over 200-300. Some will number near 1000. I shoot everything in the highest quality jpeg among 4 different cameras depending on which is the best tool for the job.

    At the end of each event, I go back to home base if possible to start uploads. If not, I get back to home base at the end of the day/night. Home base has three 8m/768k cable modems.

    I copy all images off the cards to one drive of the the archive drives. Once the images have been verified as being properly copied and compared, the cameras and cards are put away to later refresh, clear, clean, and recharge.

    The images from the archive drive are uploaded into galleries by day. If all the events were in one day, one gallery. It takes several hours (up to 15hrs) for this upload process. I will typically sleep at night while this takes place. Once the gallery is completely uploaded, I verify that the correct number of images are in the gallery. If not, I have to figure out what happened and re-upload anything missed.

    Once the upload is verified complete, I move all the images to separate event galleries. Once each event gallery has all the images from each event, I process one gallery at a time. Processing entails rotating and hiding images. Once this is complete, each gallery is used for a writeup posted on the main web site. Once all the writeups are complete, the main web site homepage is updated, and the writeup and gallery links are promoted.

    During the promotion process, the entire batch is re-uploaded into an archive gallery for the day. This is identical to the first gallery uploaded, but is there for archival purposes only. The archive drives are also synced so that all of them have all the images.

    I can usually get stuff online within 72hrs, but I want it faster like you guys do it! Any pointers?
    Pictures and Videos of the Huntsville Car Scene: www.huntsvillecarscene.com
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    timk519timk519 Registered Users Posts: 831 Major grins
    edited December 19, 2009
    SamirD wrote:
    At the end of each event, I go back to home base if possible to start uploads. If not, I get back to home base at the end of the day/night. Home base has three 8m/768k cable modems.

    ....

    The images from the archive drive are uploaded into galleries by day. If all the events were in one day, one gallery. It takes several hours (up to 15hrs) for this upload process.
    What size images are you taking? With the number of cablemodems you have, 15 hrs for an upload sounds long.
    SamirD wrote:
    During the promotion process, the entire batch is re-uploaded into an archive gallery for the day. This is identical to the first gallery uploaded, but is there for archival purposes only. The archive drives are also synced so that all of them have all the images.
    It sounds like you're uploading the same material 3 times - once for the day gallery, once for each event, and again for your 'archive' gallery.

    Is this true?

    If so, I'd suggest uploading lower-res pics the first time to get it out of the way faster, do your PP, upload the event galleries, then use "SM copy" to copy all the images from the event galleries to the day gallery.

    I'd also suggest LR to organize and process your stuff - it's a great tool!
    • Save $5 off your first year's SmugMug image hosting with coupon code hccesQbqNBJbc
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    SamirDSamirD Registered Users Posts: 3,474 Major grins
    edited December 19, 2009
    timk519 wrote:
    What size images are you taking? With the number of cablemodems you have, 15 hrs for an upload sounds long.
    My cameras are 5 and 8 megapixels so the image sizes are from 2-4mb each. When I have have 1000 photos at say 4mbytes, that's 4000mbytes to upload. My cable modems upload at 768 kilobits or 96kbytes (8bits/byte). 1000kbytes in a mbyte so that's 4000000kbytes to upload at 96kbytes per second, or 41,667 seconds, roughly 12 hours. But I have three cable modems so divide 12 by 3 and it's about 4 hours for 4GB (4000mb). On days I shoot 8GB, so it's 8hrs straight of blinking lights.

    That's the surprising thing to me on how fast you guys upload. For me, that's the most time consuming part in the workflow. It's why I skip any type of post. The time I save in uploading by culling/processing prior to uploading is better spent sleeping.
    timk519 wrote:
    It sounds like you're uploading the same material 3 times - once for the day gallery, once for each event, and again for your 'archive' gallery.
    Is this true?
    Actually only twice. The first gallery is completely split up into event galleries. It's empty when I'm done. Then I upload all my images for each day into an archive section. but this is usually after everything is published and done.
    timk519 wrote:
    If so, I'd suggest uploading lower-res pics the first time to get it out of the way faster, do your PP, upload the event galleries, then use "SM copy" to copy all the images from the event galleries to the day gallery.
    I could do this, but the time that I spend doing this cuts into sleep time. I can upload twice in my sleep, literally.
    timk519 wrote:
    I'd also suggest LR to organize and process your stuff - it's a great tool!
    I've never used lightroom, but have heard good things about it. Since PP isn't a part of my workflow, I've never looked into any tools like that.
    Pictures and Videos of the Huntsville Car Scene: www.huntsvillecarscene.com
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    dbvetodbveto Registered Users Posts: 660 Major grins
    edited December 19, 2009
    I use LR for my complete work flow including uploading. When I shoot for the football team it is under tough lighting so that is why I shoot in Raw.
    and I can average 250 to 300 shots and after culling. At this time I do it all my self. I have to have approx 24 shots totally done and send the same night for different publishing needs by the team.
    I typically upload around 150-200 shots when all is done.
    Dennis
    http://www.realphotoman.com/
    Work in progress
    http://www.realphotoman.net/ Zenfolio 10% off Referral Code: 1KH-5HX-5HU
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    SamirDSamirD Registered Users Posts: 3,474 Major grins
    edited December 20, 2009
    dbveto wrote:
    I use LR for my complete work flow including uploading. When I shoot for the football team it is under tough lighting so that is why I shoot in Raw.
    and I can average 250 to 300 shots and after culling. At this time I do it all my self. I have to have approx 24 shots totally done and send the same night for different publishing needs by the team.
    I typically upload around 150-200 shots when all is done.
    Great feedback! How much time would you say you spend on PP before uploading? What type of upload connection do you have and what are your final file sizes?
    Pictures and Videos of the Huntsville Car Scene: www.huntsvillecarscene.com
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    dbvetodbveto Registered Users Posts: 660 Major grins
    edited December 20, 2009
    SamirD wrote:
    Great feedback! How much time would you say you spend on PP before uploading? What type of upload connection do you have and what are your final file sizes?

    The image size I shoot mostly is 14.6 MP and when I upload they are 6.5 to 7 mb the uploading will take about 4-6 hours for the entire album.
    As far as my PP if I shoot at our home field I will spend about 3-4 hours for pp some of the other fields do not have the same lighting so I can spent more time PP of these. The main reason is if I have consistent lighting I can do more batch processing, where I adjust one shot then copy the settings to a group of shots which can save time.
    I use Jeffrey’s “Export to SmugMug” Lightroom Plugin to create the album on SM and upload the picture.
    Dennis
    http://www.realphotoman.com/
    Work in progress
    http://www.realphotoman.net/ Zenfolio 10% off Referral Code: 1KH-5HX-5HU
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    SamirDSamirD Registered Users Posts: 3,474 Major grins
    edited December 21, 2009
    dbveto wrote:
    The image size I shoot mostly is 14.6 MP and when I upload they are 6.5 to 7 mb the uploading will take about 4-6 hours for the entire album.
    As far as my PP if I shoot at our home field I will spend about 3-4 hours for pp some of the other fields do not have the same lighting so I can spent more time PP of these. The main reason is if I have consistent lighting I can do more batch processing, where I adjust one shot then copy the settings to a group of shots which can save time.
    I use Jeffrey’s “Export to SmugMug” Lightroom Plugin to create the album on SM and upload the picture.
    I'm just thinking out loud, so 300 images at 7mb each yields about 2100mb or 2.1gb. 6-7 hours sounds about right on most Internet connections. Combine that with the 3-4hrs of pp, since you have to upload only after pp, and you've got around 9-11hrs of work in each album. Thats around 3 hrs for 100 published images. It takes my albums about 8hrs to upload even if it finishes earlier since I'm sleeping. But because I'm sleeping, I don't count that time. Then it takes about an hour for me to cull through 100 photos on SM and publish. So if I used a pp workflow like this, my publishing times would increase 3x, but so would quality. Interesting to know. thumb.gif
    Pictures and Videos of the Huntsville Car Scene: www.huntsvillecarscene.com
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    MJRPHOTOMJRPHOTO Registered Users Posts: 432 Major grins
    edited December 21, 2009
    SamirD wrote:
    I've got about the same workflow.

    I can usually get stuff online within 72hrs, but I want it faster like you guys do it! Any pointers?
    Do not sleep.
    www.mjrphoto.net
    Nikon D4, Nikon D3, Nikon D3
    Nikon 14-24 f2.8, Nikon 24-70 f2.8, Nikon 70-200 f2.8 VR II, Nikon 50 f1.8, Nikon 85 f1.4
    Nikon 300 f2.8 VR, Nikon 200-400 f4.0 VR II, Nikon 600 f4.0 II, TC-1.4, TC 1.7, TC 2.0
    (1) SB-800, (2) SB-900, (4) Multi Max Pocket Wizards
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    dbvetodbveto Registered Users Posts: 660 Major grins
    edited December 21, 2009
    SamirD wrote:
    I'm just thinking out loud, so 300 images at 7mb each yields about 2100mb or 2.1gb. 6-7 hours sounds about right on most Internet connections. Combine that with the 3-4hrs of pp, since you have to upload only after pp, and you've got around 9-11hrs of work in each album. Thats around 3 hrs for 100 published images. It takes my albums about 8hrs to upload even if it finishes earlier since I'm sleeping. But because I'm sleeping, I don't count that time. Then it takes about an hour for me to cull through 100 photos on SM and publish. So if I used a pp workflow like this, my publishing times would increase 3x, but so would quality. Interesting to know. thumb.gif
    I only count the time on PP as once I start the upload I am done other that about 10 min on album tweaks after the upload.
    Dennis
    http://www.realphotoman.com/
    Work in progress
    http://www.realphotoman.net/ Zenfolio 10% off Referral Code: 1KH-5HX-5HU
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    tjk60tjk60 Registered Users Posts: 520 Major grins
    edited December 21, 2009
    An Example:

    I shoot hockey in dim barns with bad lights.

    I'll shoot up to 650 pics in a real exciting game. I shoot jpg Fine on my D700. I get home, transfer to PC, whack all the bad ones and repeats. I get down to around 150 for online. I use Lightroom to post. I crop every pic and use whatever adjustments I need. I use CS3 actions to batch sharpen.

    I upload full res, already PP images to smugmug. Total time is around 1,5 hours. I use Starexplorer to upload.
    Tim
    Troy, MI

    D700/200, SB800(4), 70-200, 300 2.8 and a few more

    www.sportsshooter.com/tjk60
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    jonh68jonh68 Registered Users Posts: 2,711 Major grins
    edited December 21, 2009
    tjk60 wrote:
    An Example:

    I shoot hockey in dim barns with bad lights.

    I'll shoot up to 650 pics in a real exciting game. I shoot jpg Fine on my D700. I get home, transfer to PC, whack all the bad ones and repeats. I get down to around 150 for online. I use Lightroom to post. I crop every pic and use whatever adjustments I need. I use CS3 actions to batch sharpen.

    I upload full res, already PP images to smugmug. Total time is around 1,5 hours. I use Starexplorer to upload.

    That is close to what I do. I shoot L jpg Normal. I think photogs who shoot RAW for sports events are killing themselves unless this is for major publication.

    I use Microsoft Expression to sort out the strongest 6-14 pictures for the newspaper and then leftovers for my galleries. Once tagged, I then download the pics to the appropriate files.

    Since I am on deadline, the newspaper gets priority so I work on those using DXO for cropping, curves, WB adjustments etc. and process in batch.

    I open the files in Photomechanic and caption, and do any touch up editing using PSE. FTP the pics to the server.

    After the upload to the paper, I select the leftovers using DXO and edit those. My automatic settings are set at 10 inches widest side at 300 dpi saved at 90%. This produces a file size in the 500kb to 1.5 mb file size. Easy for uploading.

    I create a gallery on smugmug and upload full size images so I don't have to fool with the pics anymore. I am not going to put unedited pictures on my gallery.

    Total time is 1-3 hours depending on how many pics I took and then culled out.
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    thezoomerthezoomer Registered Users Posts: 11 Big grins
    edited December 22, 2009
    I shoot hockey, 6-10 games in a day, usually 2 games per CF card, as I am usually shooting 2 games at the same time. Approx. 150-170pix per game. I'll get home and start sorting through using generic Nikon View software. As I complete each game I then start using my noise software. I'll have 3 computers going at the same time. As they finish getting rid of noise I then start uploading to SM. Again, 3 computers going at the same time. Once finished uploading to SM, process starts again until all games are complete and all are uploaded.

    Total time is approx. 12 hours.
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    HoofClixHoofClix Registered Users Posts: 1,156 Major grins
    edited December 23, 2009
    Shooting horse shows, mostly horse trials on the eventing side, over a two day show I can have including me as few as three photographers in my staff, and as many as seven at some larger shows. I also have a card assistant who constantly makes the rounds to pick up cards and get them downloaded and organized in the trailer.

    Each staff has a "number flip board" which they use to show the rider's number, and after each rider goes by, they take a closeup picture of the flip board.. The number is large enough in a small thumbnail that it can be read without enlarging it. We all shoot in the largest format jpg that the camera has. I tell each of them where to be, and I also will call them frequently to tell them if I want them to adjust their wb.

    Back in the trailer, my card assistant downloads each card, and using either Breeze Browser or Nikon View NX, she slides each rider's photos into a premade folder that is their number (rider 1 has folder 001 and so on.) After the cards are sorted, she then kicks in a little template that I have designed that makes galleries for an intranet that I have in my trailer. Basically, the rider can go into my trailer, sit at one of as many as seven monitors, click on their rider number and see their pictures. The monitors are in kiosk mode, so no one can steal the images.

    After the show I first back up the whole show to a portable hard drive. I then hook that drive up to another computer, then batch process the whole show using the old Nikon Capture Editor 4. It has a setting that is basically just an auto-contrast, not an auto-levels. (I don't do levels as it pulls in too much blue.). I overwrite-save each image at 80%. At this point I have batch corrected images on a portable and the originals on my server.

    Now is the time that I use Star Explorer (thanks Nikolai!) to create a new subcategory, which is a particular horse show, and then within that subcategory I batch create as many as 500 galleries to my Smugmug. Galleries are created within a few minutes to a half hour, all to my own custom settings which include my watermark, disabled external links, no sharing, and a size limit, etc...

    Then using Star Explorer I next take the images for each rider, set them in their cue, press the green button. I then hope I go to bed!

    I can have as many as 10,000 images and as few as 600, but usually about 4,000 on a weekend. My cable connection can push as many as 150 per hour, so it can take several days, but it uploads whether I'm sleeping or awake, there or not there, whether I'm naughty or nice! If someone is at the end of the cue and wants to look, I just pause the cue and pull theirs up to the front.

    wings.gif
    Mark
    www.HoofClix.com / Personal Facebook / Facebook Page
    and I do believe its true.. that there are roads left in both of our shoes..
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    SamirDSamirD Registered Users Posts: 3,474 Major grins
    edited December 23, 2009
    MJRPHOTO wrote:
    Do not sleep.
    rolleyes1.gif Not an option. I'm usually so pooped I'm having to start the upload through double vision. Any other suggestions?
    Pictures and Videos of the Huntsville Car Scene: www.huntsvillecarscene.com
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    SamirDSamirD Registered Users Posts: 3,474 Major grins
    edited December 23, 2009
    dbveto wrote:
    I only count the time on PP as once I start the upload I am done other that about 10 min on album tweaks after the upload.
    And that's where you've got some time savings for sure--less images to upload, less work within SM.

    But I'm looking at total time from shoot to published, and unfortunately upload time is a pretty big factor in that.
    Pictures and Videos of the Huntsville Car Scene: www.huntsvillecarscene.com
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    SamirDSamirD Registered Users Posts: 3,474 Major grins
    edited December 23, 2009
    tjk60 wrote:
    An Example:

    I shoot hockey in dim barns with bad lights.

    I'll shoot up to 650 pics in a real exciting game. I shoot jpg Fine on my D700. I get home, transfer to PC, whack all the bad ones and repeats. I get down to around 150 for online. I use Lightroom to post. I crop every pic and use whatever adjustments I need. I use CS3 actions to batch sharpen.

    I upload full res, already PP images to smugmug. Total time is around 1,5 hours. I use Starexplorer to upload.
    Thank you for the post! I think your workflow is similar to most, and quick! Does the 1.5hrs include upload time? Do you have to do any album tweaking once it is in SM?
    Pictures and Videos of the Huntsville Car Scene: www.huntsvillecarscene.com
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    SamirDSamirD Registered Users Posts: 3,474 Major grins
    edited December 23, 2009
    jonh68 wrote:
    That is close to what I do. I shoot L jpg Normal. I think photogs who shoot RAW for sports events are killing themselves unless this is for major publication.

    I use Microsoft Expression to sort out the strongest 6-14 pictures for the newspaper and then leftovers for my galleries. Once tagged, I then download the pics to the appropriate files.

    Since I am on deadline, the newspaper gets priority so I work on those using DXO for cropping, curves, WB adjustments etc. and process in batch.

    I open the files in Photomechanic and caption, and do any touch up editing using PSE. FTP the pics to the server.

    After the upload to the paper, I select the leftovers using DXO and edit those. My automatic settings are set at 10 inches widest side at 300 dpi saved at 90%. This produces a file size in the 500kb to 1.5 mb file size. Easy for uploading.

    I create a gallery on smugmug and upload full size images so I don't have to fool with the pics anymore. I am not going to put unedited pictures on my gallery.

    Total time is 1-3 hours depending on how many pics I took and then culled out.
    Great feedback! clap.gif How many images do you end up culling and publishing? How many do you usually shoot? What's the percentage of keepers? With small images sizes like 1.5mb, your upload times won't be too bad unless you have a lot of images like I usually do.
    Pictures and Videos of the Huntsville Car Scene: www.huntsvillecarscene.com
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    tjk60tjk60 Registered Users Posts: 520 Major grins
    edited December 23, 2009
    SamirD wrote:
    Thank you for the post! I think your workflow is similar to most, and quick! Does the 1.5hrs include upload time? Do you have to do any album tweaking once it is in SM?

    It does not includes upload, but I'm in the range of 150-200 pics to upload. I crank it when I'm done with the sharpening, and with StarExplorer and paying my broadband provider extra to get 6MB upload, it goes pretty fast....
    Tim
    Troy, MI

    D700/200, SB800(4), 70-200, 300 2.8 and a few more

    www.sportsshooter.com/tjk60
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    SamirDSamirD Registered Users Posts: 3,474 Major grins
    edited December 23, 2009
    thezoomer wrote:
    I shoot hockey, 6-10 games in a day, usually 2 games per CF card, as I am usually shooting 2 games at the same time. Approx. 150-170pix per game. I'll get home and start sorting through using generic Nikon View software. As I complete each game I then start using my noise software. I'll have 3 computers going at the same time. As they finish getting rid of noise I then start uploading to SM. Again, 3 computers going at the same time. Once finished uploading to SM, process starts again until all games are complete and all are uploaded.

    Total time is approx. 12 hours.
    This sounds a bit like what I used to do before SM--3 computers going simultaneously to resize images, build galleries, and copy them to the server. Now I just have multiple upload sessions, which is less work for me, but not quicker than having a local server. But a local server couldn't do half of SM can do.

    How many images do you end up publishing? How long does your upload process take? Do you sleep some time in between the process? How long is your day when you're finished?
    Pictures and Videos of the Huntsville Car Scene: www.huntsvillecarscene.com
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    SamirDSamirD Registered Users Posts: 3,474 Major grins
    edited December 23, 2009
    HoofClix wrote:
    Shooting horse shows, mostly horse trials on the eventing side, over a two day show I can have including me as few as three photographers in my staff, and as many as seven at some larger shows. I also have a card assistant who constantly makes the rounds to pick up cards and get them downloaded and organized in the trailer.

    Each staff has a "number flip board" which they use to show the rider's number, and after each rider goes by, they take a closeup picture of the flip board.. The number is large enough in a small thumbnail that it can be read without enlarging it. We all shoot in the largest format jpg that the camera has. I tell each of them where to be, and I also will call them frequently to tell them if I want them to adjust their wb.

    Back in the trailer, my card assistant downloads each card, and using either Breeze Browser or Nikon View NX, she slides each rider's photos into a premade folder that is their number (rider 1 has folder 001 and so on.) After the cards are sorted, she then kicks in a little template that I have designed that makes galleries for an intranet that I have in my trailer. Basically, the rider can go into my trailer, sit at one of as many as seven monitors, click on their rider number and see their pictures. The monitors are in kiosk mode, so no one can steal the images.

    After the show I first back up the whole show to a portable hard drive. I then hook that drive up to another computer, then batch process the whole show using the old Nikon Capture Editor 4. It has a setting that is basically just an auto-contrast, not an auto-levels. (I don't do levels as it pulls in too much blue.). I overwrite-save each image at 80%. At this point I have batch corrected images on a portable and the originals on my server.

    Now is the time that I use Star Explorer (thanks Nikolai!) to create a new subcategory, which is a particular horse show, and then within that subcategory I batch create as many as 500 galleries to my Smugmug. Galleries are created within a few minutes to a half hour, all to my own custom settings which include my watermark, disabled external links, no sharing, and a size limit, etc...

    Then using Star Explorer I next take the images for each rider, set them in their cue, press the green button. I then hope I go to bed!

    I can have as many as 10,000 images and as few as 600, but usually about 4,000 on a weekend. My cable connection can push as many as 150 per hour, so it can take several days, but it uploads whether I'm sleeping or awake, there or not there, whether I'm naughty or nice! If someone is at the end of the cue and wants to look, I just pause the cue and pull theirs up to the front.

    wings.gif
    Wow, what a process! How long is a normal day once you get a chance to sleep? Have you thought about using multiple computers and cable modems to upload faster? Do you think it would improve sales?
    Pictures and Videos of the Huntsville Car Scene: www.huntsvillecarscene.com
    Want faster uploading? Vote for FTP!
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    SamirDSamirD Registered Users Posts: 3,474 Major grins
    edited December 23, 2009
    tjk60 wrote:
    It does not includes upload, but I'm in the range of 150-200 pics to upload. I crank it when I'm done with the sharpening, and with StarExplorer and paying my broadband provider extra to get 6MB upload, it goes pretty fast....
    Ahhh...6mb upload. I wish I had that. Combining three top-end cable modems here barely yields me 2.1mb. :cry They're supposed to upgrade to 20 or 12/2mb in the first quarter of 2010. That would help my upload issues.
    Pictures and Videos of the Huntsville Car Scene: www.huntsvillecarscene.com
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    jonh68jonh68 Registered Users Posts: 2,711 Major grins
    edited December 23, 2009
    SamirD wrote:
    Great feedback! clap.gif How many images do you end up culling and publishing? How many do you usually shoot? What's the percentage of keepers? With small images sizes like 1.5mb, your upload times won't be too bad unless you have a lot of images like I usually do.

    Usually if I shoot a football game I will have about 250-400 shots. Since I am on deadline, I usually leave at halftime. Of those, I select the 8-14 strongest for the paper, and maybe 20-24 if it is a big game with kids that have college potential for file art.

    Of the remaining pics, it can be up to 20-70 that I keep for gallery purposes. If I were shooting this as an event and not for the paper I would probably select more. My galleries are a little different than someone who shoots events because my purpose is a bit different since I am already getting paid by the paper. May galleries are put up so I could get away from parents asking me to email extra pics to them.
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    HoofClixHoofClix Registered Users Posts: 1,156 Major grins
    edited December 24, 2009
    SamirD wrote:
    Wow, what a process! How long is a normal day once you get a chance to sleep? Have you thought about using multiple computers and cable modems to upload faster? Do you think it would improve sales?
    Well more than half of my revenue comes from people who just fill out an order form at the show, before I even get home to upload images. That's why it's so important to have an intranet view system on site. Except for weekly and monthly horse magazines, pretty much all of my customers are on site with me all weekend. I do have another horse-related business during the week, and when I go to that office I have my computer to upload on another internet portal if there is someone just pining to see their pictures.. Those who buy at a show get theirs uploaded last, of course..

    At a show, shooting starts at 7:30 or 8am, and can run to 10 at night or 4 PM depending on the type of show and time of year. After the show it really isn't all that stressful. I just need to deliver before leaving for another show!
    Mark
    www.HoofClix.com / Personal Facebook / Facebook Page
    and I do believe its true.. that there are roads left in both of our shoes..
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    SamirDSamirD Registered Users Posts: 3,474 Major grins
    edited December 25, 2009
    jonh68 wrote:
    Usually if I shoot a football game I will have about 250-400 shots. Since I am on deadline, I usually leave at halftime. Of those, I select the 8-14 strongest for the paper, and maybe 20-24 if it is a big game with kids that have college potential for file art.

    Of the remaining pics, it can be up to 20-70 that I keep for gallery purposes. If I were shooting this as an event and not for the paper I would probably select more. My galleries are a little different than someone who shoots events because my purpose is a bit different since I am already getting paid by the paper. May galleries are put up so I could get away from parents asking me to email extra pics to them.
    Thank you for the feedback! thumb.gif If I got paid for the event regardless, I'd probably shoot a lot less than I do. Can the parents buy prints? Does the paper plug your web site?
    Pictures and Videos of the Huntsville Car Scene: www.huntsvillecarscene.com
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    SamirDSamirD Registered Users Posts: 3,474 Major grins
    edited December 25, 2009
    HoofClix wrote:
    Well more than half of my revenue comes from people who just fill out an order form at the show, before I even get home to upload images. That's why it's so important to have an intranet view system on site. Except for weekly and monthly horse magazines, pretty much all of my customers are on site with me all weekend. I do have another horse-related business during the week, and when I go to that office I have my computer to upload on another internet portal if there is someone just pining to see their pictures.. Those who buy at a show get theirs uploaded last, of course..

    At a show, shooting starts at 7:30 or 8am, and can run to 10 at night or 4 PM depending on the type of show and time of year. After the show it really isn't all that stressful. I just need to deliver before leaving for another show!
    Ahhh, with the kiosks, uploading becomes less of a priority. What system do you use for the Intranet? And what's your paperwork workflow for orders? That's the part that would be difficult for me.
    Pictures and Videos of the Huntsville Car Scene: www.huntsvillecarscene.com
    Want faster uploading? Vote for FTP!
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    FL00DYFL00DY Registered Users Posts: 68 Big grins
    edited January 14, 2010
    It's rather timely that I found this thread. Keeping in mind that I'm not even close to making money from photos, I love taking the photos, but between leaving the venue and the photos reach SM; it feels like work. I'm using lightroom and normally shoot motorsport at the race track. A regular day nets me 1500 shots on average, most days I keep half of them. It makes me think twice about going out, cause I know I've still got maybe 2 other days not processed. I hope though that the more often I go out, the better keep:junk ratio. I use lightroom and find it rather slow.

    I'll have a read and see if there is a way I can make it easier.
    “I don’t understand bus lanes. Why do poor people have to get to places quicker than I do?” - Jeremy Clarkson

    My Blog: www.floody82.com
    My Photos: floody82.smugmug.com
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