![]() Here’s the photo, it’s Ben Poole at Spot-M from last year. Here’s a link to the page which appears in the image above: You can upload a photo, or paste a URL of the image, or you can just drag the bookmarklet to your favourites toolbar in Firefox and then just click the button on a web page with a photo on it and you get a full page of all the Exif data you could ever want (provided it’s in the file to begin with). There’as a fantastic tool made by Jeffrey Friedl called Jeffrey’s Exif viewer: Exif data from one of My photo’s viewed in Jeffrey’s Exif Viewer What you might not realise is that it’s actually pretty common for photographs that have been uploaded to the internet to retain that Exif data, and there are some excellent, free tools you can use to find out the Exif data of a photo that you’re looking at on the web. ![]() This is how applications like Lightroom can organise your photo’s, and how you can tell what settings you were using when you took the picture, this is very, very useful when you’re learning surf photography, or any other kind of photography too. You are probably familiar with the term Exif data – apparently it’s short for Exchangeable Image File format, for our purposes it’s basically a bunch of meta data that’s recorded into an image file when it’s captured by a digital camera.
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