Image |
Comment |
| 02/01/2007 06:13:44 PM |
Romanceby prozacComment: Good capture and focus. Color and lighting superb. Good use of the rule of thirds. |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/01/2007 06:11:57 PM |
Water Flowby UAE_GuyComment: Nicely captured 'misty' ocean image. This is a picture I've been working on myself and want to get a decent one of sometime. Well processed and the blue works well. I'll be interested to see what shutter speed you used for this capture. |
| 02/01/2007 06:01:17 PM |
Flight Into Fantasyby hihosilverComment: Keep photographing it and you may make this pier as famous as Haystack rock in Oregon. :)
Good timing for both the bird and and the placement of the sun behind the pier. Color is rich but not overdone. Nice clouds. The silhouette is solid and black. It is surrealistic to see the tall buildings in the distant background. Overall technical quality is good and level horizon. |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 01/30/2007 02:22:22 PM |
E in high keyby KnightmovesComment: The perspective and modest nature of this shot is very nice. The technical quality in sharpening is better than most entries in this challenge.
Hate to disapoint you, but this is not high key photography. The hallmark of high key is the luminosity light curve (or histogram) weighted to the right side of the graph on your main subject. This indicates it contains more light to white pixels than dark. Your main subject has more dark pixels than light. |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 01/17/2007 08:12:30 PM |
Inner Childby shadowdoc31Comment: Great capture! Perfect expression and clarity. To bad about the distracting person walking behind your subject. |
| 01/17/2007 06:19:48 PM |
Running in Circlesby dahvedComment: Nice image, good focus but looks more like the background is moving rather than the camera. Moving the camera, of course, is what motion panning is. Unfortunately, a still camera and moving background may be assumed by some voters. |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 01/17/2007 02:01:02 PM |
Pats Fanby RingostarrComment: This is a nice image showing a lot of motion. I'd like to know how you did it. True motion panning is steadily holding the camera while you twist your body to capture the main subject in focus while the background shows the natural motion that occurs during the exposure. This looks like the camera was moving with the cyclist and not panned. The hair is in good focus indicating a very short exposure time. The only way I can conceive of this happening is panning expertly with a long focal length lens from a great distance from the subject. If you did it that way then you did an incredible job! |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 01/17/2007 01:42:36 PM |
Market Derbyby quiet_observationComment: I wouldn't say that pushing a grocery cart is the most exciting motion panning subject but you got the idea right. You might consider a longer exposure time to show more background motion in the capture. That is a key to great motion panning imagery. |
| 01/17/2007 01:39:50 PM |
Jolly Jumperby aabatkinsonComment: Bummer... this is not motion panning. Motion panning is moving the camera to follow your main subject. Normally, the main subject is in clear focus and the background is not. You will want to practice the technique. It is not all that easy sometimes, but you will like the results when you get a good motion panning capture. :) |
| 01/17/2007 01:34:38 PM |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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