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| 09/23/2003 01:08:12 AM | Pedal Fasterby Spork99Comment: Originally posted by Spazmo99:
Originally posted by dwoolridge: as i suspected. pointless. |
What happened to your "...is seen to be artifice..." comment?? I was rather fond of it. |
If images are but a bulk commodity to be quantified, ordered, and barely glimpsed, then what of the words said unto them? Attach to them no significance and give them no permanence, but let them remain ephemeral, false, and vague, as memory. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 09/17/2003 03:13:02 AM | | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 09/17/2003 03:05:40 AM | Hoping For A Good Buntby alternaruleComment: Although the actual action is happening slightly left of centre, this capture creates a sense of greater activity to the right, where the catcher and umpire crouch in combined tension: one holding steady for the ball; the other ready for the call.
The lines enclosing the burnt umber dirt reach out to delineate a greater part of the action. The curving line of the green boundary in the upper right tells of more out-of-frame elements and also draws the eye to the left, far out of frame, where the action will soon take place.
The colours, in keeping with the sense of activity, are appropriately vivid, bordering on cartoonish (perhaps an additional, unintentional commentary in itself). | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 09/17/2003 02:49:17 AM | The Sideline Coachby OneSweetSinComment: There is an interesting moment captured here, despite the few technical drawbacks of the shot. Though the subject of most shots is the on-field action, this unusual perspective gives us a glimpse into action on the periphery of sports. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 09/17/2003 02:44:01 AM | Mental Joustingby DennisFComment: The creator of this sculpture is entirely responsible for the excellent use of static objects to convey both the action of chess and the mental activity involved. Photographically, you have captured a less common perspective and it is this that redeems the work as partly your own. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 09/12/2003 06:11:36 AM | Freedom of speechby kostiaComment: This is a most refreshing interpretation of the challenge. The freedom of speech, or rather the right to free expression, begins with thoughts & ideas becoming speech and the edifying, enduring written word. Surely the awakening of the consciousness through stimulation of the imagination is the final indelible form in which these ideas take root, made ethereal again, and passed on, in speech.
The red button serves as warning, hanging seemingly weightless in front of these mighty books, itself a simple manifestation of ideas. It asserts but does not preach, a token and an offering. At its core, this is an excellent combination of elements, although there is room for improvement, from a photographic standpoint.
(Technically, there is a bit too much glare along some of the spines. The colours in the books do not contribute so much to the shot I think, although the red of the button is necessary. Outside of dpc, it might be nice to desaturate all but the red button; you might even get a nice effect in a dpc-legal way.) Message edited by author 2003-09-19 01:32:56. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 09/12/2003 06:11:31 AM | |
| 09/07/2002 03:00:00 PM | |
| 09/07/2002 02:58:00 PM | |
| 08/26/2002 01:02:00 AM | |
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