Showing posts with label Steller. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steller. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Intro 2 PJ class goes on field trip for their final project: Team Photo Story

   Documenting the student team! My photos of a great bunch of students who were up for the challenge.
   After you open the story, click on the arrow to the right of the image to advance the story.
Thank you for viewing!
(Photos by Lori King)

Tuesday, March 8, 2016

On cell phone photography: Post your event pics instantly, responsibly

   This is a busy time for news.
   Political rallies are at the top of the list. I know many of you Wayne State students are attending candidate rallies this week, but I've yet to see a single Instagram or Twitter post of your photographic coverage.
   Why not?
   One student lamented he couldn't take a camera because it wasn't allowed. I responded with this: Cover the event with your cell phone!
On Deadlines
   The power of cell phone photography is the ability to post instantly.  Even if you have two expensive DSLR cameras hanging off of your shoulders, you can still snap a quick photo, write a concise caption, and hit send within minutes. This is preferred for spot news, particularly.
   If you're at the event, why wait to post it when you get home, or never? Shoot and send immediately! Think like a journalist. Don't you want to inform your readers in that moment? That's the power of a cell phone, which is an additional tool in your journalism toolbox. You can post a single image, a photo slideshow or videos fast and easy. 
   In fact, I recently did a blog post on Steller, an iPhone photo slideshow app. The piece was on people writing messages on ice at a hockey rink for cancer survivors and those who died. Within 30 minutes of shooting about 15 images and a couple of 15-second videos, I posted the photo story on Twitter, and it had nearly 2,000 views by the next day! 
   Political rallies, spot news, sporting events (see Steller story below) and even news conferences are great places to capture mini feature picture stories with your cell phone.  
   Don’t forget about Instagram! Instagram allows you to be more creative in your event coverage. Shoot short video clips, and capture moments that you typically wouldn’t take with your DSLRs. Use extreme perspective. Get close. Shoot wide. However, don’t use filters if you’re covering the event as a journalist. Keep it real.
   But there is a danger when posting instantly. The ability to make errors, particularly in your captions, is high. So, triple-check your spelling, verify your facts, and double check your venue spelling before you post mistakes. 
   With Instagram, you can edit your mistakes, but not with Twitter. You’ll have to delete your original post and repost. This means your mistake will be up for a long time, and for many eyes to see, before you discover the error.
And here's a Steller feature picture story from a sporting event:
SELECT & COPY YOUR EMBED CODE close instagrampinteresttwitterfacebooksteller

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

Steller offers visual storytelling app (outdated)


   There's a cool app in Apple town, and I like it.
   As a photojournalism and multimedia instructor, I'm always searching for different ways to present and share visual storytelling content. It is certainly a challenge keeping up with the multitude of new multimedia tools constantly being developed. 
   This blog post is about just one of those tools, the Steller app for the iPhone and iPod Touch, released in 2014, and now it's available for the Android.
   This mobile-first digital storytelling app combines text, photos and videos in a clean, visually-appealing format. The story includes a title page, and up to a total of 20 pages that are taken directly from your iPhone photo collection. 
   Once you download the free app, you hit the + button in the bottom middle of the page, choose your first image or text page, select your design your story, and continue selecting each page one at a time. You can design the page as you go, or go back to it later to delete or add pages. Once you are finished, Preview and the Publish. You can then share to Twitter, Facebook or your blog. It is that simple.
   The beauty of this app is that you view the story like you're reading a book. The pages turn!
There are a few drawbacks, though:
  • Viewers not familiar with the app don't know that the story needs to be manually opened, and the pages turned by swiping the page or hitting the right or left computer arrows. 
  • You can't share the complete story on Instagram (at least that's how it used to be); only a single page selected from the story.
  • The videos loop, and viewers might not know to swipe out of them.
  • Shooting vertical video makes more sense here because you can fill the entire screen. If you shoot horizontal, there's too much white space top and bottom.
  • The archiving of these stories is worrisome. How long will this app survive? But this isn't a big problem because this app was chosen as one of the Best Apps of 2014 by Apple, and you still have the original images in your phone's photo gallery. 
  • Elements in stories published back in 2014 to at least 2016 are now outdated, thus you really shouldn't try editing them. You'll get this message: "You are editing an old story with outdated themes and features. Some functionality will be restricted.
  • And in 2019, your free themes are limited to two: classico and Noir.
   Photojournalists don't have a lot of input over how our photos are published on the web and in the newspaper. But this app gives us back a little power. 
   Consider the many ways visual stories can be told. Take, for example, at this high school basketball game I shot, there were four ways my photos were published:
Screen grab from Toledo Blade newspaper's front sports page.
  1. Instagram. I decided to start out by shooting from a high angle, so I went to the top of the bleachers, in a corner facing the basket. I took a panoramic photo with my cell and posted it on Instagram.
  2. Steller. Then I remembered the Steller app. To tell a different story, I avoided being redundant with images, shooting photos and videos with my phone that I wouldn't have shot with my two DSLRs. 
  3. Toledo Blade newspaper. Because we have an early deadline for the print version of the newspaper, I transmitted my best 12 photos from the first two periods via Photo Mechanic FTP using an air card. This caused me to miss the entire third period.
  4. Toledo Blade website. I continued shooting in the fourth period, and sent the rest of the images for a photo gallery on the website.
   This app can be a powerful way to get our social media savvy youth, who often turn to YouTube and Snapchat for their 'news,' to view real stories about real people, places and things. And it's a fun way for us veteran shooters to have fun, too!
   For these reasons, I'm think this storytelling app is worth using and teaching.
Here are a few links to stories and reviews on Steller (though these links are dated, as well):
JEA Digital Media article on Steller
Storybench story on Steller and mobile reporting
Tutorials on the VSCO Cam app