I’d sincerely like to thank those of you who have bought my eBook over the last few days.
Site traffic has at times pushed the servers into overload and therefore some customers may be experiencing problems receiving confirmation emails.
If you have placed an order and don’t receive the email with an hour, please feel free to drop me an email at [email protected] and I will sort it out pronto.
I would also like to thank those of you who were more than generous with the product price. It’s well appreciated and totally not expected.
Unfortunately, I’ve also had a number of hackers, who think its great to rip someone off for £2.50, a word of caution, IPs are logged and subsequently banned.
Again, many thanks to you all for the support.
Regards,
John
I would like to, purchase your ebook for Silkypix 3.0. I am at your website and I do not see where to purchase this text. I am from the US. Can this still be purchased?
One question, do you recommend Silkypix 3.0 and why? I am trying to get a RAW converter for both my .orf files that come from my Olympus E500 and E520 DSLR.
Thank you for your assistance.
Dennis,
Follow the link http://www.eos-images.com/products-page/
Add the ebook to the basket and checkout.
Silkypix has a rendering style which is unique among raw converters, its great for certain styles of photography and I use it 50% of the time. In addition, it has a great feature set which is sometimes hidden by its quirky interface.
John: Thank you, thank you, thank you. I recently ordered the Silkypix ebook (I’m in the US). It took a bit of searching on your site to figure out how to do it, but the order, when completed, took only a few minutes before the book was downloaded. I think I hsd figured out most of the basics of Silkypix before I got the book, but its clear language reinforced some of my conclusions and clarified areas I was unsure about or just didn’t understand. I look forward to your promised more advanced tutorial. You might be interested, or maybe not, in my raw converter experience. When I first got into digital after more than 50 years of 35mm film photography, I was ignorant and overwhelmed. So I shot jjegs and used Picasa. As I progressed I went to Panasonic, and tried to use Silkypix 2.0. I liked the results, but found it murky. The free version of 3.0 then available was more to my liking, but too many features didn’t work for it to be considered. Lightroom was the apparent solution. I happily used version 1 through 1.4, and tried 2.0, which is a great poduct. However, it is slow on my computer. That led me to try the full version of Silkypix 3.9SE. The interface was greatly imporved over 2.0 in my opinion. But, what was most apparent, was that the color rendition of Silkypix was vastly superior to that of Lightroom. I have conducted some very unscientific surveys of comparisons, and everyone who has been asked has selected the Silkypix images as being superior. So, although the new Lightroom 2.0 has some great features, I will stay with Silkypix. If you have any input with Shortcut Software or Ishikawa, maybe you could convince them to incorporate the local corrections of Lightroom 2.0 into the next upgrade of Silkypix 3.0. Again, thanks for your work from a grateful old photographer. Don
Don, I really appreciate the feedback and thankyou for the input, I’ll be writing a new v4 book over the following months and will endeavour to add some advanced tips and tricks into the mix!