Ideas to improve Aperture’s Faces feature
April 15, 2010 by Juergen Specht · 8 Comments

I must say that I really like Aperture’s Face Detection feature. Its not perfect and takes a loooong time to run initially on your photo library, but its impressive nonetheless. Rarely I learned that much about the pictures I have taken over the last years.
However, no new technology comes without flaws and while I really like the interface of Aperture, I have a few ideas how to make it more useful in future versions.
More heuristics
Aperture is targeted for the professional photographer and what professional photographers often do is to shoot many pictures of the same people in a short amount of time. The face detection feature could use heuristics like “If there is a confirmed face of Mary shot at 1:00:01 and there is a confirmed face of Mary at 1:00:05 and there are detected faces in the pictures in between the time frame, the likelihood that the face belongs also to Mary is very, very high“.
For all my studio shootings, this would be a real time saver.
There could be probably more heuristics for faster organization and better detection of faces like taking color and background color into consideration. Pictures taken at events or in clubs often have a particular color to them (think gel’ed lights) which could cluster them somehow together.
Timesaving shortcut buttons
Currently there is only one way to select a huge amount of suggested faces in the “Mary may be also in the photos below” feature at once: You can drag a rectangle around all these pictures and they all turn into a green “Mary” marker. However, sometimes Faces finds more non-matching faces, so it would be more easy to toggle the selection into a red “Not Mary” and then just toggle the few Mary’s with one click into a green “Mary“. My point here is to toggle between a negative selection “None of these faces are Mary” or a positive selection “All of these faces are Mary“.
It could be implemented in 2 ways, the first idea would be 2 additional buttons like “Reject all” and “Select all” or a single toggle button like “Revert selection” which would turn on click all red “Not Mary” into a green “Mary“. This definitely would save time because after a selection, you only have to click the few Mary’s to turn them into a positive identification when there are less Mary’s in the picture than non-Marys, or vice-versa.
Bigger target buttons
One of the most subtle, but biggest improvement between Aperture 2 and Aperture 3 was the size of the controls…they grew just a little bit, but now they are much more easy to find and handle, especially on huge screens. Unfortunately the “Done” and “Cancel” buttons of the face detection are too tiny to make it easy to hit them. Make them just a bit bigger in the next update, please.
Priority Processing
For huge photo libraries like mine, it takes ages to process all the images. However, its implemented as a background process taking very little resources (if you have a powerful computer like I have). The good thing is that my computer is completely responsive and nothing slows down while the face detection does its thing. However at night when I am sleeping, the computer could speed the processing up and process more pictures in a shorter time. Again, this could be done with heuristics: “If its night and there was no mouse-move and no keyboard input in a certain time frame and the screensaver or screen energy saving is running, then ramp up the processor cycles for the background processing of the face detection.“.
As soon as the operator wiggles the mouse or presses a key to get the computer out of screen saver mode, the background processing could slow down a bit to not interrupt the foreground processing. Again, this would be a real time saver.
These are the features I would like to see in the next update of Aperture, but if somebody would pay me for thinking more, I am sure I could come up with many more ideas to make the Faces feature more pleasurable to use.
When the term “Tear Sheet” gets an entire new meaning…
December 18, 2009 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment
The term “Tear Sheet” usually refers to published copies of your work, often literally clipped out of magazines or newspapers as a reference and evidence that your work has been published and are similar in this regard to reprints of articles.
My latest tear sheet about Girls Ground Wrestling published in a Japanese tabloid with the translated title “Weekly True Stories” however made me aware of an entire new meaning of “tear sheets”.
The “Tear Sheet” in the magazine “Weekly True Stories”
I think this was the first time that I published in a Japanese tabloid and I am not that familiar with the content of these magazines, but this specific one seems to have only one general topic: to enhance the size of a certain male appendix temporarily through visual clues or permanently through offered magic spells and potions in their advertisements.
But even more interesting is the fact that you actually cut (or tear?) some of the pages apart to see the entire content to ward off the people who read these magazines for free in convenient stores and make them actually buy the magazine.
Luckily my photos appeared in the not-tear-apart section of this particular magazine ;)
A hairy little secret
December 16, 2009 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment
Whenever I take a taxi in Tokyo, I browse through the little advertisement flyers they have to offer…they are always somewhat special. This one I kept, its just too good to throw away.

The text on top says “Medical Laser Hair Removal” and the prices in green show how much it costs to remove hair from the individual body parts, while the violet speech bubbles compare it to the prices of “expensive underwear” (40,000yen), an “expensive watch” (630,000yen) and an “expensive handbag” (110,000yen).
I wonder if I just learned something?
The cutest request I’ve ever received
December 2, 2009 by Juergen Specht · 2 Comments
Since I have so many photos on my web site, I receive also a lot of requests for them.
The Sheriff – my portrait
But the cutest one I have ever received was this one:
I have a friend who is in a bind.
His house burned down, and he lost almost everything.
He is trying to put together some promotional videos and photos so he can get back on his feet.
You have some photos of him in your Western Village set [...].His name is Eric, and he is the American Cowboy Sheriff in your photos.
Do you have higher resolution copies of those photos, and if so, is there any way that we could get copies of them?
The rejected photo
November 14, 2009 by Juergen Specht · 2 Comments
A long time ago back in Germany I did some photojournalism jobs here and there for a variety of magazines and newspapers. One day they ask me to cover the opening day of the swimming season in some local pool. Nothing too exciting was going on and I didn’t really expected anything from this assignment, so I covered the basics, shot some portraits of the first guests, some seniors, some kids and this jumper.

Suddenly several suits assembled at the other pool and I walked over to see what was going on.
The management knew to play the media well, invited the local mayor and hired 3 girls in skimpy outfits to official open the swimming season and even more photographers gathered already for this moment…all at the same spot. I had 2 choices: take the same picture from the same position than every other photographer or to find a different position to get a unique picture. I choose the latter… Click here to read more…
Happy Halloween!
October 31, 2009 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment
Just in time for Halloween I published a series of portraits I took at the Kawasaki Halloween Parade today and in 2005 and 2004.
The mystery camera reveals their secrets
October 20, 2009 by Juergen Specht · 1 Comment
Some years ago my wife found an old disposable camera near an abandoned hotel resort somewhere in the mountains. In all these years we kept it on a shelf and wondered what kind of secrets this mystery camera will reveal when we finally bring it to a lab…now we know!
Looks like it was a lavish party :)







How I organize my photo library
September 11, 2009 by Juergen Specht · 10 Comments
Since I got my first professional digital camera in 1999 (if you don’t count an exotic Apple QuickTake 150 in 1995), I needed a future compatible system to store my images in a file system. I quickly settled for a very simple system and now 10 years and almost 400,000 photos later I realized how smart I was back then, it still works perfectly for my needs.
Is there a new building in Ginza which looks like this…?
September 11, 2009 by Juergen Specht · Leave a Comment
I just remembered a strange moment at my last exhibition (and yes, its over now, this is the last post about it – I promise!), which I like to share.
An old man came to the gallery and had only a brief look at my pictures on the wall, he obviously didn’t like them. Then he saw some of my postcards on the table (marked as “Take Free”), took the one above and asked my wife “Is this the new building in Ginza?“.
My wife, slightly confused, responded “No, this is a female body“. He looked again and instantly dropped the postcard like a hot potato and left the gallery.
Since this moment I wonder if I missed some kind of architectural wonder somewhere in Ginza… just which building was he referring to??
The Flash Helmet – A Photographer’s Quest for Perfect Light
September 10, 2009 by Juergen Specht · 11 Comments
Back in 2002, there was no Strobist or a small flash culture, but I was already ahead of the times and created this little conception. To test it out, I’ve made an appointment with my friend June in a park and let her test it.

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