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Comments Made by Bear_Music
Pages:   ... [1113] [1114] [1115] [1116] [1117] [1118] [1119] ... [1248]
Showing 11151 - 11160 of ~12478
Image Comment
Voices
04/30/2005 04:34:09 AM
Voices
by DannyM

Comment:
**** C R I T I Q U E C L U B C O M M E N T ****

There's a quirky affability to this image that I like very much. The overall composition is eefective, viz placement of the subject down and right and the crowd of messages surrounding and compressing her. The facial expression is downright amusing and endearing. The overall sense of being lost & confused in the midst of a sea of messages and communication comes across clearly. Although others have commented negatively on the shades, I disagree; they fit the gestalt of the image perfectly for me with their overtone of anonymity.

So why didn't this techincally competent (sharp, well-exposed, well-composed) image score better? Personal vagaries of the voters aside (and those are hard to factor in, except to say it's not a WOW type of shot no matter how you slice it up, it's more of a subtle, endearing shot) I have these observations:

1. The tonalities of her flesh are somewhat too dull, too cyan maybe, it's a little offputting in a subtle way.

2. The background messages are crisper and sharper appearing than the subject herself (because they ARE crisper and sharper, more saturated colors and hard edges do that), so the BG is actively competing with the subject for our attention.

3. The DARKEST part of this image, perversely enough, is the part we should be drawn to; the subject's face. Her arm and shoulder stand out more than her face does.

How can you deal with this? In basic editing, it's hard to do. Since this was an advanced editing challenge, here's a possible approach;

Make a careful selection of the subject herself in whatever manner works best for you, via masking, lasso, magic wand+lasso, whatever. This will take some time. Feather the selection to maybe 6 pixels and save it.

Invert the selection and go to work on the background with a combination (each on a separate adjustment layer) of hue/saturation, selective color, and levels to mute it down somewhat. With the selection still loaded, create a duplicate layer from background, name it "blur", and apply slight gaussian blur to pull some of the sharpness out of the background. Then go back to the levels adjustment layer and tweak that so the end result is good for you.

Now go to make the "bur" layer the active layer and make a copy of that. name it "subject". Load the original selection of subject only onto this layer and use dodge and burn at a very low percentage to bring the face up a tad and take the shoulders/arms down a tad. Then make a levels adjustment layer to bring a little visual "pop" into the subject, taking care that the hotspot on the nose doesn't go grotesque on you. If necessary, use a little healing brush to bring some borrowed tonality to that hot spot. Finally, make adjustment layers for selective color and, possibly, hue/saturation to warm up her flesh tones and bring her to life.

When allt his looks good, save it with layers intact, flatten image, resize, and save as jpg. Be sure you're working in sRGB color space (image/mode menu to assign color profile).

Hope this helps. I'm assuming you have photoshop. If you don't, put it on your wish list :-)

Robt.

Photographer found comment helpful.
Treasures of the Sulu Sea
04/30/2005 03:25:15 AM
Treasures of the Sulu Sea
by flip89

Comment:
The lighting on the pearls is very nice. Overall, the relatively shallow DOF is working against you. IMO it should either be sharp throughout or even more OOF at the back.
Photographer found comment helpful.
The Earring
04/30/2005 03:23:46 AM
The Earring
by saiphfire

Comment:
This is quite striking in a subdued, minimalist way. I wish you'd given us some subdued, minimalist text to show us how you visualize using that negative space..
Photographer found comment helpful.
Take the Leap: Buy Me!
04/30/2005 03:21:55 AM
Take the Leap: Buy Me!
by dsidwell

Comment:
Very appealing rendering of the jewelry itself, crisp and luminous, lacking a bit in catchlights on the facets, but the BG is REALLY working against you here, it's SO dreary. Mutes foliage, for example, might have been more inspiring. I accept that your idea may have been to show beauty arising out of dreck, but it isn't working for me at that level.
Photographer found comment helpful.
Who says girls have all the fun?
04/30/2005 03:19:08 AM
Who says girls have all the fun?3rd Place
by snackwells

Comment:
Very professionally done. Nice to see someone shooting a watch with the hands in balance, most didn't bother. Overall tonalities a bit flat, and this is hurting the luminace of the metal. A bit of a goose in levels would do wonders. Well-balanced, a strong entry.
Photographer found comment helpful.
Surprise Her
04/30/2005 03:17:15 AM
Surprise Her
by Brad

Comment:
The picture itself is remarkable. Crisp, well-lit, wonderful and appropriate use of desat. Those are not easy stones to shoot. The type is doing you no favors herem however. One thing I notice that's really bugging me, though; this would appear to be a MAN, with a BEARD, and then there's the downy ear-hair... Seems at odds with the headline, "Color HER world"... What do you mean, if I wear an earring it color's my GAL's world? I don't quite get it. So basically you're confusing me with an otherwise wonderful image. Strong score regardless.
Photographer found comment helpful.
Defining Beauty
04/30/2005 03:13:05 AM
Defining Beauty
by arnit

Comment:
Beautifully lit. I'd have toned down the white of the type to something more in balance with the overall tone, and used a little less negative sapce, both type and subject seem a bit lost in all that black. Of course, if there were more copy being applied, the black sapce might integrate better...
OUTBACK
04/30/2005 03:11:15 AM
OUTBACK
by DrJOnes

Comment:
I love this one. It is beautifully lit, and makes a rational virtue of understating both the watch and the copy in a way that's entirely appropriate to the perceived marketing thrust; men who don't care about flash and value substance. I hope this does well. I'm afraid the voters may see "not enough jewelry" and score it down for that, but I think it's terrific.
Photographer found comment helpful.
February
04/30/2005 03:08:53 AM
February2nd Place
by nico_blue

Comment:
This is VERY nice. Crisp and detailed, luminous, nigh-key BG that still retains visual iinterest, Elegant type.
Photographer found comment helpful.
Dali's Earrings
04/30/2005 03:07:33 AM
Dali's Earrings
by labuds

Comment:
This is a sweetly composed shot. In many ways it's very pleasing. I have a couple very specific nits, though.

1. The tonal range seems "off" somehow. I can't but my finger on it, but it's "dull". It may just be the mottled, flat gray BG, not sure. Certainly, there seems to be true black and true white, but overall the luminosity of the image isn't what I'd expect of the setup.

2. The way your lighting is set, the shadow lines exactly parallel the leftmost ear post, and this produces a strange effect in the lower left corner.

Still, a nice, subdued, detailed image and a strong score from me.
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Showing 11151 - 11160 of ~12478


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