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The Ohio Health Cancer Survivors Dinner photographed Friday June 17, 2016 which had more than 1,000 people attending the dinner and program in Fairhaven Hall at the Richland County Fairgrounds.
Google just announced that it’s making its Nik Collection of desktop photo editing software totally free.
Google acquired Nik Software and its popular Snapseed photo editing application in September 2012. Although Google killed off Snapseed for Desktop about six months later, it was still big news when Google started selling the entire Nik suite (originally valued at around $500) for a reduced rate of $150 later that month.
Now it’s free.
“Photo enthusiasts all over the world use the Nik Collection to get the best out of their images every day,” Google writes. “As we continue to focus our long-term investments in building incredible photo editing tools for mobile, including Google Photos and Snapseed, we’ve decided to make the Nik Collection desktop suite available for free, so that now anyone can use it.”
The Nik Collection has 7 desktop plug-ins that provide a wide range of photo editing features, including mimicking the look of old cameras and films, retouching and correcting photos, darkroom retouching, adjusting color and tonality, HDR, image sharpening, and noise reduction.
The entire collection is free to download starting today, March 24th, 2016. If you spent money buying the collection anytime this year, you’ll get a full refund of your purchase price (it’ll be automatically issued soon).
“We’re excited to bring the powerful photo editing tools once only used by professionals to even more people now,” Google says. You can download the suite for yourself for both Windows and Mac here.
Polished, posh and in touch with the trends, Edmond Louis handbags are a go-to for a luxe outfit accent. Shop structured silhouettes with gleaming hardware, or choose a slightly more relaxed style. A glossy finish lends contemporary appeal to this supple leather bag, and a spacious interior with plenty of pocket space keeps essentials effortlessly organized. Styling by Morgan Hamelberg @morganhamelberg
Gerald Wilson, the dynamic jazz big band leader, composer and arranger whose career spanned more than 75 years, has died, September 9, 2014. He was 96.
Gerald Stanley Wilson was an American jazz trumpeter, big band bandleader, composer/arranger, and educator. Born in Mississippi, he was based in Los Angeles from the early 1940s. In addition to being a band leader, Wilson wrote arrangements for Duke Ellington, Sarah Vaughan, Ray Charles, Julie London, Dizzy Gillespie, Ella Fitzgerald, Benny Carter, Lionel Hampton, Billie Holiday, Dinah Washington, and Nancy Wilson.
Wilson’s son, jazz guitarist Anthony Wilson, said his father died yesterday at his Los Angeles home from pneumonia.
The big band leader began his career in the late 1930s as a trumpeter for Jimmy Lunceford’s band before forming his own big band in 1944 featuring female trombonist Melba Liston. He played and worked as a composer-arranger with the likes of Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Benny Carter and Dizzy Gillespie, and he arranged music for Ella Fitzgerald, Ray Charles, Sarah Vaughan, Carmen McRae and Bobby Darin.
Wilson, who was born in Shelby, Mississippi, and later moved with his family to Detroit, started out on piano and bought his first trumpet at age 11. During his tenure as a trumpeter with Lunceford, he arranged the hit tunes Hi Spook and Yard Dog Mazurka.
After four years with Lunceford and a stint in the U.S. Navy during World War II, Wilson settled in Los Angeles, where he worked in the bands of Benny Carter, Les Hite and Phil Moore before forming his own band. He worked with Billie Holiday on the singer’s tour of the South in 1949.
Wilson led his own bands in the ’50s and ’60s, but took frequent hiatuses as he became one of the most in demand arrangers and orchestrators in jazz and pop music. He wrote more than 60 charts for Charles, scored motion pictures such as Otto Preminger’s Anatomy of a Murder, and served as the conductor and music director of TV’s The Red Foxx Show.
But despite his commercial success, he never gave up his dedication to jazz. “I decided to do what I wanted to do, and what I wanted to do was jazz. Because first and foremost, I’m a jazz musician,” Wilson told Jazz Times magazine in a 2011 interview.
In the early 1960s, he again led his own big bands featuring such musicians as trumpeters Snooky Young and Carmell Jones, saxophonist Bud Shank and Teddy Edwards, guitarist Joe Pass, and vibraphonist Bobby Hutcherson. His big band compositions displayed an adventurous approach with complex voicings and harmonies were spotlighted on a series of critically acclaimed recordings for the Pacific Jazz label, including such albums as You Better Believe It!, Moment of Truth, and Portrait.
His marriage to a Mexican-American, Josefina Villasenor Wilson, led him to incorporate Latin music into his jazz compositions. His tune, Viva Tirado, dedicated to bullfighter Jose Ramon Tirado, became a Top 40 pop hit for the rock group El Chicano in 1970. He also composed his first piece for symphony orchestra, Debut: 5/21/72, on a commission from Zubin Mehta and the Los Angeles Philharmonic.
With his long white hair in later years, Wilson became famous for his dance-like style of conducting, which he said helped listeners know what they were hearing.
“I choreograph the music when I conduct,” he told Jazz Times in 2011. “Accent everything – all the high points.”
Wilson’s popularity increased with his appearances at the Monterey Jazz Festival, which commissioned him to write extended compositions for the festival’s 40th and 50th anniversaries. His six Grammy nominations, included two nods for Theme For Monterey in 1999.
In 1990, Wilson was named a Jazz Master by the National Endowment for the Arts, the nation’s highest jazz honor.
In his later years, Wilson continued to compose new music and conduct his big band, recording a series of albums for the Mack label beginning with the Grammy-nominated New York, New Sound in 2003. His last album, 2011′s Legacy featured a piece by his son Anthony as well as his own compositions based on themes by classical composers Igor Stravinsky, Claude Debussy and Giacomo Puccini.
Wilson also worked as a radio broadcaster at KBCA-FM and taught jazz at California State University, Northridge, California State University, Los Angeles, and UCLA.
He is survived by his wife, son, two daughters and four grandchildren.
Arnold Schwarzenegger meet & greet photographed February 28, 2014 at Buca di Bepo in Columbus Ohio as part of the IFBB Arnold Sports Festival, also known as the Arnold Schwarzenegger Sports Festival is an annual multi-sport eventconsisting of professional bodybuilding (Arnold Classic), strongman (Arnold Strongman Classic), fitness, figure and bikiniweekend expo. It was established in 1989 and is named after Arnold Schwarzenegger. The main event is held annually around late February or early March in Columbus, Ohio, United States by the International Federation of BodyBuilding & Fitness (IFBB). It is the second most prestigious event in professional men’s bodybuilding, physique, figure and bikini; as well as formerly the second most prestigious event in professional female bodybuilding.
Full gallery of images HERE.
Overall Winners in the 2014 Arnold Amateur Men’s Master, Classic, Body Building, Womens Fitness, Figure & Bikini Competitions photographed February 27, 2014 at the IFBB Arnold Classic, also known as the Arnold Schwarzenegger Classic, which is an annual professional men’s bodybuilding competition run by the International Federation of BodyBuilders. The contest is held annually as part of the Arnold Sports Festival, and was first held in 1989. The main contest is always held in Columbus, Ohio.
Images of all competitors available HERE.
ECKART America Management Meeting photographed November 13, 2013 at the Renaissance Columbus Downtown Hotel.
Part of their meeting, as a team building exercise, was a community outreach making several hundred meals for the Ronald McDonald House at Nationwide Children’s Hospital.
Nationwide Children’s Hospital is a primary pediatric hospital in Columbus, Ohio, with more than 1,280 medical staff members and over 10,000 total employees. In recent years, the hospital has been ranked as one of America’s Best Children’s Hospitals by US News & World Report. It is also the pediatric teaching hospital for The Ohio State University College of Medicine.
Ronald McDonald House Charities (RMHC) is an American independent nonprofit organization whose stated mission is to create, find, and support programs that directly improve the health and well-being of children. Gerald Newman, Chief Accounting Officer for McDonald’s Corporation, was “one of the founders of Ronald McDonald Children’s Charities and was president of R.M.H.C.” RMHC has a global network of chapters in 64 countries and regions under three core programs: Ronald McDonald House, Ronald McDonald Family Room and Ronald McDonald Care Mobile.
The Longaberger Golf Club Photographed Friday November 30, 2012 for the Longaberger Company.
The Longaberger Company is an American manufacturer and distributor of handcrafted maple wood baskets and other home and lifestyle products. It was one of the primary employers in the area near Dresden, Ohio, with more than 8,200 employees and 1 billion dollars in sales. Started in Dresden, the company is now headquartered in Newark, Ohio. A family-owned and operated business, the Longaberger Company was started by Dave Longaberger in 1973, and was taken over in 2013 by CVSL, Inc. It is led by John Rochon Jr, the son of the John P. Rochon, founder and chairman of JRJR Networks and Richmont Holdings. As of April 2016 there are fewer than 75 full-time and part-time employees; approximately 30 of those still make baskets. A combination of a recession and changing tastes in home decor combined to send sales, which peaked in 2000 at $1 billion, to about $100 million in 2012.
Longaberger used direct marketing to sell products. The company had approximately 45,000 independent distributors (called Home Consultants) in the United States who sold Longaberger products directly to customers.
The old Longaberger corporate headquarters on State Route 16 is a local landmark and a well-known example of novelty architecture, since it takes the shape of the company’s biggest seller, the “Medium Market Basket”. The seven-story, 180,000-square-foot building was designed by The Longaberger Company, and executed by NBBJ and Korda Nemeth Engineering. The building opened in 1997. The basket handles weigh almost 150 tons and can be heated during cold weather to prevent ice damage. Originally, Dave Longaberger wanted all of the Longaberger buildings to be shaped like baskets, but only the headquarters was completed at the time of his death. The company stopped paying property taxes on the building at the end of 2014, and as of July 2016 intended to relocate all remaining employees to offices in nearby Frazeysburg.
In May 2015 it was announced that Tami Longaberger, who had led the company since her father died in 1999, had resigned as chief executive officer and director of the company.
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James D. DeCamp – Longtime newspaper photojournalist turned commercial photographer supplying a variety of clients with cutting edge photography and multimedia in Columbus, Ohio, the MidWest United States, and world wide.