Author | Thread |
|
06/12/2009 06:16:52 PM |
This is lovely, and I appreciate the drama in the sky. Very other-worldly. |
|
Photographer found comment helpful. |
|
06/12/2009 01:40:46 AM |
That's a pretty dramatic sky. I'm not sure it works for me with the brilliant sunny colours in the foreground. I wonder how it would work as a duotone using those sky colours. |
|
Photographer found comment helpful. |
|
06/11/2009 05:57:33 PM |
its such a dramatic image and the colour of the sky altho unnatural seems filled with foreboding and atmosphere .. i've had a look at your other crop .. it feels a lot better to me with less foreground grass and a less squarish crop .. :) |
|
Photographer found comment helpful. |
|
06/11/2009 12:27:31 PM |
Why is it that everything you want to do in photography is another thing you have to learn how to do. I keep waiting for the tool that will bring me immediate success!:) |
|
Photographer found comment helpful. |
|
06/11/2009 10:57:33 AM |
I love the deep rich tones and textures. That's a killer sky. |
|
Photographer found comment helpful. |
|
06/11/2009 10:21:06 AM |
It's my understanding a lot of folks do indeed use ND filters against just the sky - balances out the exposure. I don't use filters so I can't be of much help in that respect. As for the composition, it's OK but a bit on the static side. The "rule of thirds" bit does indeed play into landscapes a lot. One of the "rules" (which of course can be broken if your subject suits) is to NOT split the picture in half horizontally for landscapes. You do have some foreground interest - that's good. But try to figure whether you want to emphasize your foreground or your sky - which suits the shot best? - then compose with more of that element. Not sure what the lighting/color situation was in real life, but to me the sky seems an unnatural shade of pink/red. |
|
Photographer found comment helpful. |
|
06/11/2009 10:04:00 AM |
Hmmmm. I'm no expert on landscape, and I'm not sure what you had in mind, but I wonder if your .5 shutter speed might be too slow. For F/22 the grass seems to be kind of blurry, and I wonder if it's moving, ever so slightly in the breeze.
Do you have a recent version of Photoshop? There's a shadow/highlight adjustment that really helps bring out detail in things like clouds and those dark trees.
Just my NSHO, and worth every penny you paid for it. |
|
Photographer found comment helpful. |
Home -
Challenges -
Community -
League -
Photos -
Cameras -
Lenses -
Learn -
Prints! -
Help -
Terms of Use -
Privacy -
Top ^
DPChallenge, and website content and design, Copyright © 2001-2024 Challenging Technologies, LLC.
All digital photo copyrights belong to the photographers and may not be used without permission.
Current Server Time: 04/23/2024 11:01:57 AM EDT.