DPChallenge: A Digital Photography Contest You are not logged in. (log in or register
 

DPChallenge Forums >> Challenge Announcements >> "Abstract: Black and White V" Results Recalculated
Pages:  
Showing posts 26 - 38 of 38, (reverse)
AuthorThread
08/16/2020 09:46:21 PM · #26
Okay, so I could have put it in and it would have been okay so long as it didn't reach top 5.
Just wondering what SC members think as they vote on these rather obviously manipulated entries.
08/16/2020 09:54:50 PM · #27
We don't MIND the manipulation, honestly. Go wild! In all those examples the photographer went to town creating an obvious fantasy, legality was never in question. Lydia's DQ'd entry is completely different from these: she used a tool to obliterate unwanted elements and left us with no way of knowing that the surface was NOT, in fact, entirely a real and actual surface. We're surprised people don't seem to be understanding this: it's not how MUCH she used the tool, it's what she used it FOR :-(
08/16/2020 09:58:29 PM · #28
Originally posted by Bear_Music:

We don't MIND the manipulation, honestly. Go wild! In all those examples the photographer went to town creating an obvious fantasy, legality was never in question. Lydia's DQ'd entry is completely different from these: she used a tool to obliterate unwanted elements and left us with no way of knowing that the surface was NOT, in fact, entirely a real and actual surface. We're surprised people don't seem to be understanding this: it's not how MUCH she used the tool, it's what she used it FOR :-(


So, go wild, so long as you go completely wild and don't do hybrids?
08/16/2020 10:17:35 PM · #29
Originally posted by jomari:

Originally posted by Bear_Music:

We don't MIND the manipulation, honestly. Go wild! In all those examples the photographer went to town creating an obvious fantasy, legality was never in question. Lydia's DQ'd entry is completely different from these: she used a tool to obliterate unwanted elements and left us with no way of knowing that the surface was NOT, in fact, entirely a real and actual surface. We're surprised people don't seem to be understanding this: it's not how MUCH she used the tool, it's what she used it FOR :-(

So, go wild, so long as you go completely wild and don't do hybrids?

No! That's what THOSE entries did, but Liquify, for example, is frequently used when processing portraits to, say, get rid of double chins or other non-idealized sections of the human body or "enhance" the shape of lips, whatever.

Look, we have a long-established baseline in DPC where we don't allow (in standard editing) the replacement of backgrounds with something realistic that they are not, it's as simple as that. Or foregrounds, for that matter. The problem with Lydia's image has NOTHING TO DO WITH THE TOOL SHE USED: it's a matter of what she did with her image. She extended the featureless surface causing it to replace what was actually there. In the particular instance, it's maybe not that big of a "sin" -- but we'd be setting a precedent if we allowed it, whereby people could (for example) process a snapshot of their kid standing in the driveway and then eliminate the concrete, the street and houses in the BG, the telephone wires, everything, and replace it with an imaginary gradient to make it look like the snapshot was done in a studio. That's Extended Editing stuff.
08/16/2020 10:26:38 PM · #30
It just looks like she extended the background -- which is something you can't do. There's been many times where I would like to extend a background because I cropped too much in camera, but it's not legal. This was just liquefying to pull out that part of the photo. Which is basically extending the background.
08/16/2020 10:30:36 PM · #31
I have got to use the word obliterated more in my daily life. It's a good word.
08/16/2020 11:02:25 PM · #32
Originally posted by JulietNN:

I have got to use the word obliterated more in my daily life. It's a good word.


Combine it with "absolutely" for the most impact.
08/17/2020 01:07:23 AM · #33
I totally and absolutely obliterated the homemade cheesecake tonight!
08/17/2020 10:29:56 AM · #34
Originally posted by vawendy:

It just looks like she extended the background -- which is something you can't do. There's been many times where I would like to extend a background because I cropped too much in camera, but it's not legal. This was just liquefying to pull out that part of the photo. Which is basically extending the background.


I didn't extend the background. The size of the image is the same. I used a tool to fill the existing space. I liquified an existing object (the flat part of the subject). The crop remained that same, the objects in it remained the same except for liquifying them (and cloning out the buttons). Using any tool is legal. It's up to the voters to determine if it's been used too much.

Originally posted by Bear_Music:


It would be legal in any Standard Editing challenge. The real question would be, "How would the VOTERS have treated this image if it had been entered in, say, a Free Study instead of in a Van Gogh challenge?" The voters would decide how much they like the swirl effect and vote accordingly. From a "legality" point of view, however, there's a difference between using a tool to morph the sky and stars into a swirling shape while otherwise leaving them intact and using a tool to eliminate areas of the image you don't want to see by replacing them with something else.

THAT's the gray area we have to deal with, and Lydia fell on the wrong side of the line.


So, Bear_Music , if I'd done a poorer job of my Liquify, so it showed streaks in the image, then it would have been legal? I really want to know this.

If this was not a unanimous vote by SC, what was the ratio, please?

|
08/17/2020 11:24:34 AM · #35
Originally posted by Lydia:

I hear what you're saying now, but... this is what I heard before I entered:

1.) Almost *anything* is allowed in Standard Editing, as long as you don't move or create things wholesale, and as long as the source images are shot in the required timeframe. There's literally no restrictions on any specific tools - none.


Liquify is a tool. I used it without restriction as told was legal.

Change the rules now, if you like. But, currently what I did was what I was told was legal.

But you created a new surface around the entire image. You're arguing that you simply used a tool and expanded its boundary an extra five inches in all directions. From my perspective it's a new surface. Based on what Bear and General wrote it appears they thought so as well. You liquified the current surroundings of the image to infinity and beyond.
08/17/2020 11:45:09 AM · #36
Originally posted by Venser:

Originally posted by Lydia:

I hear what you're saying now, but... this is what I heard before I entered:

1.) Almost *anything* is allowed in Standard Editing, as long as you don't move or create things wholesale, and as long as the source images are shot in the required timeframe. There's literally no restrictions on any specific tools - none.


Liquify is a tool. I used it without restriction as told was legal.

Change the rules now, if you like. But, currently what I did was what I was told was legal.

But you created a new surface around the entire image. You're arguing that you simply used a tool and expanded its boundary an extra five inches in all directions. From my perspective it's a new surface. Based on what Bear and General wrote it appears they thought so as well. You liquified the current surroundings of the image to infinity and beyond.


I EXTENDED the existing surface. I created no new surface. Liquify is a tool and any tool can be used to infinity and beyond.

Or, at least we were told it could be before this DQ.

08/17/2020 11:52:48 AM · #37
Originally posted by Lydia:

I EXTENDED the existing surface. I created no new surface. Liquify is a tool and any tool can be used to infinity and beyond.

Or, at least we were told it could be before this DQ.

If we use your definition, I can essentially do single image extended editing in standard. With all the tools available in GIMP or PS, there's almost nothing I can't do with a single image if I stretch, liquify, distort, ..., to my hearts content.
08/17/2020 11:58:34 AM · #38
We're going in circles here. It's time to close this thread down. Thanks, all, for expressing your opinions.
Pages:  
Current Server Time: 08/23/2025 08:46:09 PM

Please log in or register to post to the forums.


Home - Challenges - Community - League - Photos - Cameras - Lenses - Learn - Help - Terms of Use - Privacy - Top ^
DPChallenge, and website content and design, Copyright © 2001-2025 Challenging Technologies, LLC.
All digital photo copyrights belong to the photographers and may not be used without permission.
Current Server Time: 08/23/2025 08:46:09 PM EDT.