Design your photo compositionsbefore heading out. Often times, outdoor scape photographers will compose their images based on the lens at hand (nothing wrong with that). (A photographers bucket list.)

ScapeTog - A photography planning tool. alternatives

Sun Surveyor (Sun & Moon)

Sun Surveyor takes the mystery out of the sunrise, sunset, and moon phases, allowing photographers and filmmakers to scout the best locations, plan effectively, and get the perfect shot. The Live Camera View, Interactive Map (with Street View), 3D Compass, and detailed Ephemeris provide a wealth of information about the largest natural light source in the galaxy, as well as the moon, and milky way:- View augmented reality projections of the sun and moon paths, pinpoint the time the sun or moon will be at a particular location in the sky- Predict and plan for the golden hour, blue hour and every sunrise, sunset, moonrise and moonset- Prepare night photography shots with the Milky Way & star trail featuresSolar Industry (PV) Professionals, architects, real estate agents, and gardeners will also find a wealth of empowering interactive features:- Show clients the quality and quantity of seasonal sunlight at a given location- Understand potential shade of surroundings and discover any obstructions- Create images of the summer and winter Solstice & Equinox paths for a siteAdditional features:- Photo Opportunities - an interactive listing of critical times to help inspire and generate shot ideas; including the full moon looming low in the sky during magic hour, total darkness for stargazing, and more- Position Search - an extremely powerful tool to search for sun, moon and milky way center positions within various constraints, for the perfectionist planner- Today Widget - (for the pull-down notification center) shows rise and set times for the current location and the next upcoming sun event- Visual time machine - take a quick glance at the light for a day, or dial in desired compositions easily- Moon distance, age, apogee, perigee, super moon predictions- Sun shadow information - calculate the length of shadows cast by objects- Helpful video tutorials show how to use all of the apps modules and how to shoot specific types of scenes- Share details and locations with clients and colleagues- Offline usage (excludes Map View, Street View) - enter coordinates, save & load locations with no data connection or GPS available- Measure distance, and difference between elevations, and vertical angle differentials with the Map view- Import and export Google Earth .kmz/.kml locations- Magnetic declination compensation- Languages: English, Deutsch, Franais, , Italiano, Espaol, Catal, , Norsk (Bokml), Dansk, Nederlands, (), (), , etina, Trke, Portugus (Portugal & Brasil), Polski

  • rating 4.5
  • size 30.7 MB

The Photographer's Transit

Visual field-of-view calculator and shot planner for outdoor photographers. The Photographers Transit (Photo Transit) is a map-based shot planning tool for outdoor photographers who use interchangeable lens cameras (such as SLRs). Key features: - Define your own camera and lens kits- 5 available map types, including 2 offline map choices- Adjustable field of view map overlay- Google Street View camera control- Elevation profile from camera to subject location- Apparent altitude profile to visualize the effect of local terrain- Find and save your favorite locations- Shot lists and projects- Integrates with TPE (The Photographers Ephemeris)- Sample project with example shots and reference photosSharing + Export:- Twitter, Facebook, Message- View in Safari- Email Shot- Email Project- Add shot to calendar- Import/export locations- All sharing options include link to website so you can freely share your photo plans with friends and colleaguesAdvanced features: - Teleconverter support- Add custom sensor/film type- Show field of view for multiple prime lenses- Simulate lens zoom directly- Camera-subject distance, bearing, altitude- Camera orientation, pitch and height above ground- Subject height above ground- Map tilt and rotate, autorotate- Magnetic north option- Multiple elevation data sources available (Google, SRTM3, AsterGDEM, GTOPO30)- SRTM3, AsterGDEM and GTOPO30 elevation data is saved for offline use- KML project and shot exportAvailable map types include: - Google Maps Standard, Hybrid, Terrain - OpenCycleMap Topographic (available offline)- OpenStreetMap (available offline)Note: - This app is designed for photographers using interchangeable lens cameras (e.g. SLR, Micro 4/3rds, Medium/Large format film)- Maps and elevation-based calculations require a data connection unless an offline data source is used- Maps and elevation data must be viewed while connected to the internet in order to be saved for later use offline- Not all map types and elevation data sources are available offline- Topographic map data is available only between 60N and 47S - Overlay maps are not always available for the highest zoom levels - Topographic maps courtesy of OpenCycleMap.org - OSM map tiles courtesy of CartoDB- Google Elevation data is subject to daily usage limits per IP address- Availability of specific map types and Google Street View is dependent on 3rd party map service availability, terms and conditions, and is subject to change - Google Maps, Google Street View and Google Earth are trademarks owned by Google Inc.- Future updates may require iOS 9 or higherPlan the perfect vantage point for your photographic subjects and enjoy a better field of view

  • size 47.6 MB

Cascable

Unlock the potential of your compatible* WiFi camera with Cascable. Built for professional and amateur photographers alike, Cascable is the best tool available for working with your camera in the field. Uses the Camera Remote API by Sony.

  • rating 3.83333
  • size 57.3 MB

PlanIt! for Photographers

This is a special call to landscape photographers, travel photographers, nature photographers and those who are interested in night photography, city photography, time-lapse, star-trails, milky way or astrophotography: look no more, this is the ultimate app for you - the PlanIt Ansel Adams dedicates the beginning of his first book Taos Pueblo to visualization. He introduced the idea of previsualization, which involved the photographer imagining what he wanted his final print to look like before he even took the shot. More video tutorials at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bna8_Mj8Bso&index=1&list=PLTmlTTxPbBbeu8Yx4paLUytV8z60SSL_w

  • size 178 MB

LightTrac

LightTrac is a must have tool for all outdoor photographers. Quickly determine at what time and location the light conditions are perfect to shoot your subjects outdoors. PhotoGeekNews

  • size 19.4 MB