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Rutherglen charity to host photography course
Rutherglen charity to host photography course

Daily Record

time13 hours ago

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Record

Rutherglen charity to host photography course

A new 10-week block of the popular course run by Healthy n Happy starts in September A Rutherglen charity is running a new 10-week block of its popular photography course. ‌ The weekly sessions at Healthy n Happy community development trust begin on Wednesday, September 3, taking place from 7-9pm at the Number 18 venue on Farmeloan Road. ‌ Included in the busy programme are two field trips plus an exhibition and launch party for participants' work throughout the course. ‌ The course is led by hugely experienced photographer Ian Robertson, who has been taking pictures for 50 years, presents a weekly radio programme on the subject and is a Licentiate of the Royal Photographic Society. ‌ It includes sessions on camera handling, digital photography, portraiture, lighting and landscape photography, and will introduce participants to the use of software packages Photoshop and Lightroom. No experience is necessary and course members can bring either their own camera or can use a smartphone. Organisers say it is 'ideal for anyone who would like to try something different, learn a fun new skill, loves photos and is looking for new ways to take that perfect shot', with a previous graduate saying they feel 'more confident, inspired and motivated taking photos'. The 10-week course costs £60, which can be paid in three instalments.

Travel photography tips: How to capture stunning vacation photos
Travel photography tips: How to capture stunning vacation photos

Time of India

time15-07-2025

  • Time of India

Travel photography tips: How to capture stunning vacation photos

Do you ever wish that you had a photographer to capture all your memories while travelling? Knowing some simple photography tips will help you take extraordinary photos from your phone the next time you head out for your dream destination. Here are some tips for capturing better photos for your next vacation: Decide the shot You might already be familiar with the different modes on your phone camera, but using them appropriately will help you elevate your photography. Use the HDR mode to get more detailed photos, as this setting combines three shots into a singular photo to achieve the best results. Apart from their usual functions, food mode is ideal for close-ups, and night mode helps you shoot in low-light indoor settings. Try out different angles Behind that one perfect shot lies many attempts. You can experiment with angles to change the vibe of your photos. The next time you want to make a skyline look grand, take photos from a low angle while tilting your phone up. While taking pictures of a delicious meal, place your phone at a 45-degree angle for the best results. Choose the right composition Knowing some basic composition hacks will help you transform your photos. The rule of odds suggests that having an odd number of things in your photos makes it more interesting. For a more visually pleasing composition, enable the grid feature on your phone camera and try to place your subject in the centre of the image. You can also incorporate parallel lines, patterns and symmetry to make your photos more eye-catching. Ditch the zoom feature The zoom feature on most smartphones has a different mechanism from professional cameras and results in low-quality images. So what should you do when you want to take a picture of a far-away object? Take a picture without any zoom and use the crop feature while editing. This will help retain the quality of the image you have captured. Editing goes a long way If your photography skills fail, editing can completely transform your photos. Simple edits like adjusting the lighting, making colours mode vivid, increasing contrast, and blurring or removing background objects can make them stand out. You can either use the built-in editor in your phone gallery or apps like Lightroom to make your vacation photos more dreamy. Know what lighting works best Ever wondered why people call the hours before sunset the 'golden hours' for photography? Natural lighting provides the best conditions for photography. The next time you want to capture your memories while on vacation, try to take pictures outdoors or let some sunlight into your room for the best results. While taking photos in low-light settings or at nighttime, use the night mode instead of the flash for more detailed and vivid photos. Now you know how to take best shots!

Channel 5 launches new challenge show inspired by iconic Eddie Murphy film
Channel 5 launches new challenge show inspired by iconic Eddie Murphy film

Scottish Sun

time09-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Scottish Sun

Channel 5 launches new challenge show inspired by iconic Eddie Murphy film

The new show has a retro feel to it 'for more than one reason' Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) EDDIE MURPHY's Eighties movie Trading Places is the inspiration for a new TV project. The Channel 5 show has the same name and will see two people with very different lifestyles have to walk in one another's shoes. Sign up for the Entertainment newsletter Sign up 3 Eddie Murphy alongside Jamie Lee Curtis and Dan Aykroyd in Trading Places Credit: Alamy So you might end up watching a banker try his hand at farming, or a violinist become a lorry driver, or a ballerina ditch their tights in favour of working on an oil rig. It is based on the story at the heart of comedy Trading Places, which sees Eddie's down-and-out character Billy Ray Valentine trade positions with upper-class stock broker Louis Winthorpe, played by Dan Aykroyd. Meanwhile, snobbish Louis becomes a street hustler and pals with local hooker, played by Jamie Lee Curtis. A TV insider said: 'While this has strong echoes of the 1983 movie, it has a retro feel to it for more than one reason. "The new project definitely has a whiff of Channel 4's Wife Swap or Faking It, which were hugely successful in the Nineties and Noughties. 'Though this does take things to higher level, as there is an implied amount of competition given that it's two people trying to excel in the other's field of expertise.' But the experience goes much further than their nine-to-five job. The participants will live in one another's houses, take over their hobbies, and even socialise with their friends and families. They will even have to follow the other's sleep routines — and neither has the faintest idea what the other does for a living before they start filming the show. DAMIAN'S GALAXY OF STARS ACTING royalty DamiaN Lewis brought together a galaxy of stars for the launch of Lightroom's Prehistoric Planet: Discovering Dinosaurs. I was on Wife Swap - what the other woman said when she went through my fridge left me reeling The attraction, in King's Cross London, is a new immersive experience that takes visitors back to prehistoric times, 66 million years ago. 3 Damian Lewis with celeb pal Billie Piper Credit: Getty 3 GMB host Kate Garraway was one of a string of Damian's famous pals to attend Credit: Getty Damian, who played Henry VIII in the BBC's Wolf Hall dramas, lends his dulcet tones to proceedings as the narrator. But at the official launch he was also playing host to a string of famous pals including Billie Piper and GMB host Kate Garraway. Other big names attending included Kay Burley, Anita Rani, Charlotte Ritchie and Matt Johnson. The prehistoric world was brought vividly to life through Lightroom's cutting-edge 360-degree projection technology – and all to the sound of a score by Hanz Zimmer. LIAM'S GIFT TO SINGERS NICOLE SCHERZINGER has told how co-star Liam Payne would put in extra hours behind the scenes of Building The Band to help the wannabes. The late singer is also a judge and mentor on the Netflix talent show that launched yesterday. It was filmed prior to his shock death last October. Nicole, who was a guest judge on The X Factor in 2010 when Liam found fame with One Direction, said of his time on Building The Band: 'He was in his happy place coming full circle, having started out in a similar situation on a talent reality show, and then having the global success that he has had, and then to be able to give back and to mentor bands. 'He put in the extra hours to work with these bands even off screen. 'He was giving back and that's one of his gifts.' AMY SET FOR LAST LAUGH THE first comedian primed to join a new star-studded cast of Jimmy Carr's Last One Laughing is Amy Gledhill She has been snapped up by Prime Video for the second series of the hit comedy show, which drops next year. Jimmy is back to host the show challenging ten of the UK's funniest people enter a room for a six-hour battle of wills - where the last one to laugh is crowned the winner. Amy will follow in the footsteps of Bob Mortimer, Daisy May Cooper and Joe Lycett who featured in the first outing. An insider told The Sun: 'Amy is not massively known as yet, but she's a rising star who has already achieved acclaimed success at the UK National Comedy Awards and Edinburgh Fringe Festival. 'Last One Laughing is the perfect opportunity to show off her talent - and help catapult her onto the worldwide stage.' ROSE'S THRILLER GROWS ITV has commissioned a second series of thriller Code of Silence which stars Rose Ayling-Ellie. The first, six part series was widely acclaimed when it aired on ITV1 and ITVX in May and June and the first episode consolidated with 7.5m viewers In particularly, people tuning in were impressed by it putting a deaf character, Alison, at the heart of the action. Former EastEnders and Strictly winner Rose, who plays the key role, said: 'I'm so proud that Code of Silence has been recommissioned. 'The response to the first series has been incredible, and it means so much to be part of a drama that not only keeps audiences on the edge of their seats, but also puts a Deaf character at the heart of the story. 'I'm really excited to see where Alison's journey goes next and to be working again with the wonderful cast, crew and creative team behind the show.' A NEW trailer has dropped for series two of Netflix hit Wednesday, and it suggests Jenna Ortega's eponymous lead is in grave danger. During one of her psychic visions, she learns her best friend Enid Sinclair (Emma Myers) will die and it is her fault. It lands on August 6. NETFLIX's longest-running unscripted series Queer Eye has been canned. The lifestyle show followed the Fab Five – experts in fashion, design, relationships, grooming and interiors – as they made over willing its 2018 debut more than 90 episodes have been aired.

Channel 5 launches new challenge show inspired by iconic Eddie Murphy film
Channel 5 launches new challenge show inspired by iconic Eddie Murphy film

The Irish Sun

time09-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Irish Sun

Channel 5 launches new challenge show inspired by iconic Eddie Murphy film

EDDIE MURPHY's Eighties movie Trading Places is the inspiration for a new TV project. The Channel 5 show has the same name and will see two people with very different lifestyles have to walk in one another's shoes. 3 Eddie Murphy alongside Jamie Lee Curtis and Dan Aykroyd in Trading Places Credit: Alamy So you might end up watching a banker try his hand at farming, or a violinist become a lorry driver, or a ballerina ditch their tights in favour of working on an oil rig. It is based on the story at the heart of comedy Trading Places, which sees Eddie's down-and-out character Billy Ray Valentine trade positions with upper-class stock broker Louis Winthorpe, played by Dan Aykroyd. Meanwhile, snobbish Louis becomes a street hustler and pals with local hooker, played by A TV insider said: 'While this has strong echoes of the 1983 movie, it has a retro feel to it for more than one reason. Read more on Channel 5 "The new project definitely has a whiff of Channel 4's Wife Swap or Faking It, which were hugely successful in the Nineties and Noughties. 'Though this does take things to higher level, as there is an implied amount of competition given that it's two people trying to excel in the other's field of expertise.' But the experience goes much further than their nine-to-five job. The participants will live in one another's houses, take over their hobbies, and even socialise with their friends and families. Most read in News TV They will even have to follow the other's sleep routines — and neither has the faintest idea what the other does for a living before they start filming the show. DAMIAN'S GALAXY OF STARS ACTING royalty DamiaN Lewis brought together a galaxy of stars for the launch of Lightroom's Prehistoric Planet: Discovering Dinosaurs. I was on Wife Swap - what the other woman said when she went through my fridge left me reeling The attraction, in King's Cross London, is a new immersive experience that takes visitors back to prehistoric times, 66 million years ago. 3 Damian Lewis with celeb pal Billie Piper Credit: Getty 3 GMB host Kate Garraway was one of a string of Damian's famous pals to attend Credit: Getty Damian, who played Henry VIII in the BBC's Wolf Hall dramas, lends his dulcet tones to proceedings as the narrator. But at the official launch he was also playing host to a string of famous pals including Other big names attending included Kay Burley, Anita Rani, Charlotte Ritchie and Matt Johnson. The prehistoric world was brought vividly to life through Lightroom's cutting-edge 360-degree projection technology – and all to the sound of a score by Hanz Zimmer. LIAM'S GIFT TO SINGERS NICOLE SCHERZINGER has told how co-star Liam Payne would put in extra hours behind the scenes of Building The Band to help the wannabes. The late singer is also a judge and mentor on the Netflix talent show that launched yesterday. It was filmed prior to his shock death last October. Nicole, who was a guest judge on The X Factor in 2010 when Liam found fame with One Direction, said of his time on Building The Band: 'He was in his happy place coming full circle, having started out in a similar situation on a talent reality show, and then having the global success that he has had, and then to be able to give back and to mentor bands. 'He put in the extra hours to work with these bands even off screen. 'He was giving back and that's one of his gifts.' AMY SET FOR LAST LAUGH THE first comedian primed to join a new star-studded cast of Jimmy Carr's Last One Laughing is Amy Gledhill She has been snapped up by Prime Video for the second series of the hit comedy show, which drops next year. Jimmy is back to host the show challenging ten of the UK's funniest people enter a room for a six-hour battle of wills - where the last one to laugh is crowned the winner. Amy will follow in the footsteps of Bob Mortimer, An insider told The Sun: 'Amy is not massively known as yet, but she's a rising star who has already achieved acclaimed success at the UK National Comedy Awards and Edinburgh Fringe Festival. 'Last One Laughing is the perfect opportunity to show off her talent - and help catapult her onto the worldwide stage.' ROSE'S THRILLER GROWS ITV has commissioned a second series of thriller Code of Silence which stars Rose Ayling-Ellie. The first, six part series was widely acclaimed when it aired on ITV1 and ITVX in May and June and the first episode consolidated with 7.5m viewers In particularly, people tuning in were impressed by it putting a deaf character, Alison, at the heart of the action. Former EastEnders and Strictly winner Rose, who plays the key role, said: 'I'm so proud that Code of Silence has been recommissioned. 'The response to the first series has been incredible, and it means so much to be part of a drama that not only keeps audiences on the edge of their seats, but also puts a Deaf character at the heart of the story. 'I'm really excited to see where Alison's journey goes next and to be working again with the wonderful cast, crew and creative team behind the show.' A NEW trailer has dropped for series two of Netflix hit Wednesday, and it suggests During one of her psychic visions, she learns her best friend Enid Sinclair (Emma Myers) will die and it is her fault. It lands on August 6. NETFLIX's longest-running unscripted series Queer Eye has been canned. The lifestyle show followed the Fab Five – experts in fashion, design, relationships, grooming and interiors – as they made over willing its 2018 debut more than 90 episodes have been aired.

Prehistoric Planet: Discovering Dinosaurs
Prehistoric Planet: Discovering Dinosaurs

Time Out

time08-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Time Out

Prehistoric Planet: Discovering Dinosaurs

This King's Cross Lightroom now has surely the weirdest repertoire of any venue in London, possibly the world. With an oeuvre based around massive megabit projection-based immersive films, its shows so far have been a David Hockney exhibition, a Tom Hanks-narrated film about the moon landings, a Vogue documentary and a visualiser for Coldplay's upcoming album. It's such a random collection of concepts that it's hard to say there was or is anything 'missing' from the extremely esoteric selection of bases covered. But certainly, as the school summer holidays roll around it's very welcome to see it add an overtly child-friendly show to its roster. Bar a short Coldplay break, Prehistoric Planet: Discovering Dinosaurs will play daily at Lightroom from now until at least the end of October half-term. It is, as you would imagine, a dinosaur documentary. And indeed, if the name rings a specific bell it's because it's culled from the David Attenborough-narrated Apple TV series of the same name. It's quite the remix, though: Attenborough is out, and Damian Lewis is in, delivering a slightly melodramatic voiceover that lacks Sir David's colossal gravitas but is, nonetheless, absolutely fine. Presumably Attenborough is absent because he's very busy and very old, because while the film reuses several of the more spectacular setpieces from the TV series, it's sufficiently different that repurposing the old narration would be a stretch. Any child with any degree of fondness for the mesozoic era will surely have a great time Essentially the 50-minute experience is sub-divided into six mini documentaries, which have a wealth of high-quality pre-existing CGI to draw upon, supplemented by new bits that add an agreeable educational aspect. A bit where life-sized dinosaurs are projected on the walls and audience members are invited to come up and stand next to them undoubtedly lacks the astronomical production values of the bits from the TV show, but it is also really, really fun. And of course, it's not like we're just sitting there watching it on a big telly: it's thrilling to see battling dreadnoughtus, courting tyrannosaurs, and sweet baby sauropods at huge, almost overwhelming scale. There's a particularly impressive scene where a trio of crafty velociraptors pick their way down some cliffs to ambush some nesting pterosaurs – the pack's murderous journey spirals its way around the walls of the room until they encounter their prey. It obviously doesn't hurt that it's genuinely tremendous CGI, that stands up to being blown up to giant scale (it's far better than the BBC's recent second season of Walking with Dinosaurs). Basically, it looks great, it sounds great, and it's pretty informative, and any child with any degree of fondness for the mesozoic era will surely have a great time whether or not they've seen the original docs. The standard caveat with Lightroom is that it's expensive: although kids' tickets are cheaper than adult ones and there's a small family discount, a family of four is probably looking at something like £80 for a one-hour film (though as child tickets are cheaper it's better value proportionally if only one adult goes). Is this reasonable? I'm always suspicious of stuff aimed at children where accompanying adults have to pay more. That said, the film has been created specially for the venue, and higher-than-the-cinema prices are surely inevitable. Prehistoric Planet

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