the evenings out here - Thoughts, rants and musings about absolutely everything except photography. Or cats.

Primavere Toscane

publishing empire launches today!

in Book Reviews , Wednesday, May 06, 2015

I have an announcement to make: I’ve finally managed to complete a project, and have self-published my first book, on Blurb.

Blurb 001

Still in the plastic wrapper

To be honest, “Primavere Toscane” is a very personal project, and was partly a kind of dry run, in advance of several other ideas I have in mind. It is a slim volume, weighing in at a mere 40 pages. Here’s what I have to say about it:

For over a decade, every springtime has been marked for me by a short visit to an area of Tuscany, just south of the city of Siena. This book is a distillation of hundreds of photos taken over these years, in the same places, and the same time of year.

Hundreds, if not thousands of photo books celebrating Tuscany have been published. The landscape, the towns and cities, the people, the culture, the food, even are richly visual and deeply attractive to photographers. Many of these are strongly biased towards the misty, early morning light, to the classic vistas across the Val d’Orcia, and the golden light illuminating the farmhouses and rolling hills. Certainly I’ve been drawn to these too, and this book does contain a few examples of such scenes. But more and more I’ve been attracted to the stronger, even harsh full daylight, which we landscape photographers are told to avoid. The problem with the morning light, apart from the fact that early morning in Tuscany is usually painfully early in late springtime, is that it ends up showing a very romanticised view, representing only one aspect of the complex character of the region.

I’m certainly not going to claim to do any better at representing all facets of Tuscany, or even the small area within which these photographs are taken, but I do hope to show a personal interpretation rather than replicating the work of celebrated authors.

Blurb 002

I decided to go the full DIY route, creating the layout in InDesign, and preparing the photos myself. For creating the layout, I used JPG proxy images, and then created exact size CMYK versions, sharpened at the output size. It was a lot of work, but the results are good. I chose a hardback format, and heavier Proline paper. Two things came out of that: 40 pages is barely enough to fill out a hardback format, and the Proline paper is nice, but has a degree of print-through, which surprises me. Only a little,but still. For subsequent printing I think I’d select Proline coated. The selection of paper stock is a bit of a pain with Blurb, and they could make it easier. For example, I have a couple of Blurb books by other authors, but I have no way of telling which stock they are printed on. But generally, the Blurb experience is great, apart from one eye-watering detail: the prices. They’re just way too high.

Blurb 005

The photography in the book is a mixture of “normal” and panoramic frames, and was edited down from about 700 shots. It is roughly divided into thematic sections, but these are not labelled. I’ve set it so you can flick through the whole thing on the Blurb site, using their preview tool.

If you get a chance to have a look at the preview, I’d love to hear what you think. I may create a PDF version for download sometime, but that will require a completely revised layout. Blurb’s “auto PDF” generator produces truly abysmal results.

Blurb 006

Wow. I’m a (self) published author now!

Posted in Book Reviews on Wednesday, May 06, 2015 at 10:47 PM • PermalinkComments (5)

5 comments

Leslie Ashe May 08, 2015 - 8:42
David
Beautiful set of pictures.
I too went down this road recently just to try it out to see what the quality was like.
http://www.blurb.co.uk/b/60318...
I prepared it through Lightroom with premium lustre paper (60 pages) and a hardback cover and was really pleased with the result. It is great to be able to hold a copy of your own book but I agree that the high cost is a disadvantage.
Regards
Leslie

5 comments

Leslie Ashe May 08, 2015 - 9:10
David
Congratulations. Great set of images.
Recently I tried it out as well just to see what the quality was like. Designed it through Lightroom - hardback, 60 pages and premium lustre paper. Very pleased with the result.
http://www.blurb.com/books/603...

5 comments

David Mantripp May 08, 2015 - 10:03
Hi Leslie - Thanks very much.

5 comments

David Mantripp May 08, 2015 - 10:06
Your book looks really good, some great photos in there, and nice sequencing. As for the cost, well you could go for "Trees of Iceland" next time - it would be much, much shorter and therefore cheaper 😊

5 comments

Leslie Ashe May 08, 2015 - 10:08
David
Thanks
😊