| Image |
Comment |
| 02/23/2007 05:35:00 AM |
Spare some change, Armor Truck?by CharleneComment: I took a people photography class some years ago, and the first lesson was geared toward awkward places to chop the human body. Cutting the body off at major joints almost always looks accidental rather than one's compositional intent. You lost two at the waist and two at the knees (one walking and one sitting). Then another is chopped at the ankles. Always be aware of everything in your viewfinder and its placement. |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/23/2007 05:34:56 AM |
What are you looking at?!by sickdogComment: I took a people photography class some years ago, and the first lesson was geared toward awkward places to chop the human body. Cutting the body off at major joints almost always looks accidental rather than one's compositional intent. Chopping him off at the knees, as well as cramming them tightly into the frame makes this seem like more of a shot-from-the-hip snapshot than a thought-out, composed image. |
| 02/23/2007 05:34:50 AM |
Fashionable in Stripesby wsteynComment: I took a people photography class some years ago, and the first lesson was geared toward awkward places to chop the human body. Cutting the body off at major joints almost always looks accidental rather than one's compositional intent. Chopping these two at the knees makes this capture seem like more of a quick snapshot than a composed, thought-out image. |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/23/2007 05:34:39 AM |
Working the Streetby EBJonesComment: I took a people photography class some years ago, and the first lesson was geared toward awkward places to chop the human body. Cutting the body off at major joints almost always looks accidental rather than one's compositional intent. Chopping your subject off at the ankles makes this look more like a quick, shoot-from-the-hip snapshot than a composed image. Always be aware of everything in your viewfinder, as well as its placement. |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/23/2007 05:34:36 AM |
\"And the Beat Goes On\"by IvoryComment: Too much dodging and burning. The post-processing you chose alienates your subjects from the scene rather than making the viewer focus on them. It looks like you had a nice scene that you started with, but the processing really hurt this one. |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/23/2007 05:34:29 AM |
Street Marketby brettt83Comment: Nice focus and nice work meeting the challenge, but this one is a bit too busy. With all the business, there is no defined subject to grab the eye and pull it into the image. It also feels cramped with the to individuals' feet touching the bottom of the frame. |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/23/2007 05:34:26 AM |
Strollerby JuliBocComment: This is an interesting choice of subjects, but I feel that your execution is a bit lacking. Composing this one with the child so close to the frame edge that he is facing gives a very uncomfortable, cramped feeling to the image. You also lost a good deal of detail in his hair where your blow highlight is. Softer light of a different time of day would have helped out a great deal. I'm also not too wild about the green toning that you added. With some work, this one could have been much better. |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/23/2007 05:34:23 AM |
Afternoon Stroll in the Snowby emily212Comment: I really like the scene you captured here, but I can't see the snow. I think that your use of selective coloring and desaturation sort of blended it all together. I'd also like it better without the pickup truck in the background, or at least without the arse end chopped off. I think that the selective coloring would have worked much better without it in the frame. The red in the truck pulls the eye away from your subject. |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/23/2007 05:34:20 AM |
One of the Braveby pipersdComment: I like your selective focus here, but its one the wrong spot. Either that or your shutter set too slow. Your title suggest that the firefighter is the subject of the image, yet he is out of focus and too close to the edge of the frame. It feels like he is about to walk right out of the image. On the positive side of the image, your tonal range and coloring with this one is very, very nice. |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/23/2007 05:34:15 AM |
Crossingby DPC-SystemComment: Whoa! That tree takes too much focus off your subject and he/she is a bit too centered. I do like the angle of the ground paint. It serves nicely to draw the viewer right into the main subject. That is only after we get beyond that big tree in the foreground. A different angle would have done wonders for this one. Your lighting and tonal range are both pretty strong, so you had a nice scene that fit well into the challenge. |
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