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Image Comment
A Christmas pickle!!??
01/02/2004 07:03:49 AM
A Christmas pickle!!??
by Jason

Comment:
Very tacky! At least in my eyes, because I just recently read in the internet that the pickel in the christmas tree is supposed to be a German tradition in the eyes of the US-americans. It ain't! Totally unknown in Germany.
Anyhow, technically it's well made, nice use of light and DOF. Great background too. Maybe the pickle is captured too straight. Taking the image more from the side might have been better.
And of course it fits the challenge. Good luck!
Photographer found comment helpful.
Does a Bear Pee in the Woods?
01/02/2004 06:47:07 AM
Does a Bear Pee in the Woods?
by Coley

Comment:
Is the pope catholic?!
Of course and this fits of course well to the challenge too. make me LOL!
Technically flawless. Hope you end up high!
Photographer found comment helpful.
Sponge Bob
01/02/2004 06:45:25 AM
Sponge Bob
by saalwaechter

Comment:
Like it much! I'M a big Sponge Bob fan. It's of course tacky and you made it tchnically perfect: sharp on the subject and great background with well set lights onad "tre"-branches to not make it too boring.
Well done, hope to see you at the frontpage over the next week.
Photographer found comment helpful.
Meet the Griswolds
01/02/2004 06:42:47 AM
Meet the Griswolds1st Place
by alanfreed

Comment:
One of my few favorits: sharp, well exposed and I like that the whole house can be seen in this nice brown color. It's also pretty tacky, although I'm still not sure about the term tacky.
Good luck with this great submission.
BTW: your house!?
Photographer found comment helpful.
Sony Unplugged
01/02/2004 04:05:27 AM
Sony Unplugged
by ramevi

Comment:
Greetings from the Critique Club

Initial thoughts/My opinion
Nice composition, it has a 3D touch because of the narrow DOF, good colour choice, Woow-factor is missing.

Content/Composition
The content is of course something everybody knows and that's usually a good choice for macro-shots: to show something well known on an unusual length scale, allowing to see details otherwise unseen.
However, probably everybody has looked at earphones at this scale though.
So you tried to work via the arrangement and angle of view to make them appear more interesting. To me it worked at least in parts: crossing them works very well to me and especially that the focal plane is tilted relative to the surface was a great choice. This leads to the nicely focused surface texture on the lower right and the good focus on the Sony-symbols, and hence it's 3-dimensional. Like that very much!
The shadows are well placed and cropping and overall placement of the interesting parts is well made too. Also, it follows the rule of third very well.
A major compositional drawback is the glare on the Sony symbols: they are the focus, and hence they should be without any strong disturbances. Trying to move the reflections of the lamp somewhere else might have help (maybe not possible) or the use of a polarizer.

Camera work -technically
Beside the reflections noting worth mentioning. Good camera work. Especially it's sharp were it should be.

Digital Processing - Technical
Also well made, especially not over sharpened. Also your colour choice was good and the level adjusted well too. You might have tried to get rid of the reflections via the software, because that would have been allowed.

Fits the challenge
Of course it does

Keep up the good work and
Good luck for you further submissions
Photographer found comment helpful.
Flying log
01/01/2004 06:43:40 AM
Flying log
by qnjt

Comment:
Great scenery and wonderfull clearity. Nice title too.
Have you ever tried to turn it upside down and then crop away the top: gives a very surreal result with everything flying in the clear reflection of the sky.
Photographer found comment helpful.
Made In China
01/01/2004 04:30:50 AM
Made In China
by ScantyNebula

Comment:
Greetings from the Critique Club

Initial thoughts/My opinion
Great macro shot, which lives from the two colours, shape and use of a narrow DOF. Like it very much. Misses the often discussed "WooW-factor" though.

Content/Composition
I like what I look at, because it shows an everyday item in a clear presentation. Well suited for a macro challenge IMO. The pink and blue work very well for me, although pink isn't my favourite colour.
Maybe that's a point for understanding why it has been scored rather low by the voters: it is not a macro shot where one says: "Woow, didn't know that the world looks like that on small scale" or something like that. Hence, the has to speak by its higher then average technical quality (it does have it!) and has to address the voters mind by appealing shapes and colours. I could imagine that many voters just didn't like the colour pink!

Composition is very fine and well thought of: the diagonal foreground and the curved tape in the back result in a nice contrast with respect to shape. Also the use of a narrow DOF works very well. One thing that might have been interesting with respect to composition would have been to try to bend the tape in a way that one can see the transition from the straight foreground diagonal to the curved background. Not sure if it would work well, just a thought of mine.
Also to be able to see the details of the tape works well: gives the image texture on a small length scale.
Light is very well set.

Camera work -technically
No issue here: you know how to handle your camera and it shows. Especially exposure is right on the spot!

Digital Processing - Technical
Also nothing special to mention: sharpening is just right, the blue background is absolutely homogeneous without any noise. Just perfect.

Fits the challenge
Of course, it is a macro so it fits. Well selected title too.


Keep up the good work and
Good luck for you further submissions
Photographer found comment helpful.
Grief has no boundaries....
12/31/2003 09:00:56 PM
Grief has no boundaries....
by Truegsht

Comment:
Originally posted by Truegsht:

Sorry, that is my little rant on this. Why must there always be a focal point, a border?

Maybe I can give you an answer to your question:
By the nature of photography, i.e. it's limited space on a paper or screen, it has boarders. So your submission has of course borders on all four sides. And because of that, especially when you want to show "no boundaries", you have to choose them very well, otherwise your intention does not get to the viewer.
The way you cropped/non-cropped the picture gave it a strong border: the cemetary ends for the viewer at the bush and trees at the very top.
Cropping it away would give them the feeling the cemetary goes on for ever.
Simillar issues are for the focal-point: if one views an image, the eye always walks arround to find something special. Nobody can avoid that. If there is nothing of interest the viewer looses interest.
In your image there are several foreground objects that are rather uninteresting or even disturbing (the blue flower at the very bottom).
So there would be two option to avoid this: have a focal point which is crisp and well defined and the surrounding gets less important.
Or, and that probably fits better here, have no focal point, but repating structures, which give symmetry and texture. The middle section of your image has this feature and its often seen on great images of military cemetaries.
Hope I could answer your question a little,

Jörg

Message edited by author 2003-12-31 21:01:42.
Photographer found comment helpful.
Arrested Development. On The Edge of Punk.
12/31/2003 08:17:39 PM
Arrested Development. On The Edge of Punk.
by Evil_Munky

Comment:
I second maxpowers comment!
Photographer found comment helpful.
At the Lake's Edge
12/31/2003 01:01:28 PM
At the Lake's Edge
by vtruan

Comment:
Greetings from the Critique Club

Initial thoughts/My opinion
Lots of edges and texture on various length-scales, starting by the frost/snow on the large ice plates via the small ice pieces up to the largest one. One feels the cold air at this winter lake.
However, a woow-factor is somehow missing.

Composition/Content
On the one hand the content is well chosen because a lot of sharp, well defined edges are shown. On the other hand, the composition is somewhat flat: it's more like a texture image with the third dimension missing.
Not sure if a tighter crop, a lower angle or both would have worked better, but that's were I see the major improvement possibilities.
While almost all shades of grey from black to white are included it appears also to be of rather low contrast. Maybe a more artistic approach with strong contrast could be a solution. However, that's not everybody's taste.
Also, B&W works of course well here, but a blue tint might have been as good.

Camera work -technically
No issue that I can see. The use of a wide DOF works well. Exposure is also OK

Digital Processing - Technical
Also nothing special to be mentioned. Especially sharpness shouldn't be increased, otherwise it would become to grainy

Fits the challenge
Yes, in the literal sense of "on the edge".

Good luck for you further submissions

As this is one of my first Critique Club critiques, it would be helpful to get some feedback if you like.
Photographer found comment helpful.
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