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Showing 951 - 960 of ~2866 |
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| 11/06/2005 08:04:22 PM | Shock of the Newby ImagineerComment: Just having a wander around the site, and found this. So belatedly, congratulations on your third (though there's more yellow about your second, contrarily), and congratulations on the tonality of this shot also, which is masterful. I hope you're all happy and healthy. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 10/28/2005 08:26:43 PM | A Long Road To Here.by PedroComment: I've come back to this shot a few times now: it has a relentlessness that I really like P. The fractional inclusion of the house is great - it took me a while to really sense that, but after some thought it really works - I think anything more prominent would be too easy and therefore less apt. Very communicative - there's a strong sense of ... well, maybe not pride exactly, but perhaps of challenge - like 'yeah, I know, you're thinking about my chair. ever thought about me?' kind of thing. Whatever; it's a proper portrait. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 10/26/2005 11:38:36 AM | dumboby misterjoshComment: This has major potential, I think. There are photographs by Andre Kertesz from the time he spent in New York (an unhappy decade for him, really) that use just such a technique of refelctions in puddles to break the sense of the ordinary in his images. I hate the comments I recieve suggesting different framing of my photos, and usually hate to make such comments, but in this case I think my feeling is so strong I must do so: you don't need to see the 'real bridge' in this shot. Did you try a horozontal framing, from maybe a step to the right, to play on the contrast beteen the tarmac and the cobbles and the water (especially the cobbles disappearing into the water), and to frame the refelcted support of the bridge more fully in the water? Whilst I think I understand the more purely documentary approach you've taken, I do think the reflection is so understated here that it was never going to succeed score-wise.
However; just as others have said, what's important is what you are trying to communicate. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 10/05/2005 03:20:10 AM | Unbound by SkipComment: Delighted to see your name on the front page - way overdue. Many congratulations my friend. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 09/20/2005 07:42:37 PM | Branch Intruderby davidus428Comment: from the Critique Club
I also wish the depth of field might have been pushed a touch further - it seems to me that the magic in such mega-close photography doesn't really reside in the artistic effects of shallow depth of field. Even without the ant, you might have had a quite magical image here.
For me, it's glory lies in in your chosen composition of the angles of stem and leaf, and in the scattering, the feeding of the aphids. I could not pretend to be moved, atristically by this photo, but sure as hell my scientific curiosity is engaged. I like our thoght processes too. for a successful portrayal of those thoughts I think you'd need o catch the ant in plainer view, perhaps even taking one of those sacs of fluid - however difficult that achievement is, photography of the natural world surely depends upon a patience beyond that the rest of us have to put out.
The light is handled very well, which is a strong point here. As to all those 'eww' comments ... | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 09/20/2005 07:24:46 PM | New Branches from nothingby okiesisiComment: From the Critique Club
I think you have the beginnings of an idea here - in fact, I spent some part of the very littel time I had around this challenge trying to get something similar, though with branches coming out of walls. So the basis of the shot is, I think, a winner. One could nit-pick about whether or not those shoots constitute a branch, but I think that's best left to the dictionary-obsessives that lurk around the challenge description page.
I can't say you've even begun to suceed with the shot, however. The placing of the shoots in frame is the only point in this shot's favour; at least you've avoided the dead-centre madness. First rreactions are important, not only here where the voting is generally so very fast, and the first impression here is that the shoots are out of foucs. My next thought is - why? And I can't, however I stretch my mind, find a reason for that, artistically. That feeling is only slightly relieved by the follow-up observation that it would be difficult to declare that the ground is focus either.
It's difficult to say much more - it has a quality of anti-photography about it - in that it's actually quite difficult to bring one's attention to the plant, and prevent the eye from drifting through the melancholy of the detritus that surrounds it: one os constantly drawn to the colour, and thrown off by the impossibility of finding a place to fix the eye. In that sense it has a form of message - but the lack of apparent control in the tonality and exposure of the background, and the way the fine detial is absent throughout, makes it hard to believe that's a deliberate choice. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 09/05/2005 05:49:40 PM | Death and a Ladyby JPRComment: Even without seeing the 'ladybug' - which would anyway be difficult, given the colouration - I certainly got a feeling ffrom this image which matched your title: almost entirely impressionistic, really, as I'd be very hard pushed to sya exactly why this worked for me. Too many of the properly sophisticated photographers here have ceased submitting very often, and I'm very glad that you continue to do so, however often your stuff is misunderstood. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 08/30/2005 08:05:28 PM | Dumpsters & Litterby kevrobertsonComment: I'm not sure whether this is terribly sophisticated or just very simplistic. Isn't 'dumpsters' a rather american term for a UK scene? (joke). I think this could do with more contrast work - darken those shadows some: after all, you already have a dirty non-pretty scene, why not go the whole bit and give it some real sense of grime? | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 08/30/2005 08:02:53 PM | Dawn Light (St Michael's Mount) by FalcComment: Is this not where the causeway runs out to the mount? The cver of a recent National Trust magazine has a better, though similar shot, which includes the first steps along the causeway. There'sa certain magic imparted by the wave-mist around the rock, and the vignetting (whether edited of lens-produced). Perhaps a touch simply 'pretty' for my taste - but then that's no easy thing to achieve by any means. Good work. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 08/30/2005 07:59:37 PM | Darkness and Lightby nordicComment: A fine exposure; a real sense of detail, allied to a strong sense of composition. Effective light too. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
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Showing 951 - 960 of ~2866 |
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