Image |
Comment |
| 05/10/2007 01:36:09 AM |
Unfriendlyby HizzleComment: Greetings from the Critique Club.
Hi Hizzle,
This is indeed a striking image. You have done an excellent job of making that eye piercing - a very effective use of selective desaturation (and a bit of selective saturation too). It combines to give a high-impact impression. I love the funky 'hairstyle' of the featehers, and think you have done a good job on the texture and sharpening here - it would have been easy to over do it, but you haven't. I don't think that the overall image gets much from the negative space to the left and right of the bird; a better crop in my opinion would have been closer horizontally, and with a bit more vertical to include the top of those interesting feathers.
It is my hope that these insights are helpful and constructive. Please feel free to PM me if you have any questions regarding this critique. And please remember to mark it "Helpful" if you found it so. Good luck with future challenges.
Cheers
Paul |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 05/09/2007 05:26:37 AM |
Welcome to the valleyby eliniasComment: Greetings from the Critique Club.
Hi Karl,
A superb landscape vista. What I realy like is the sense depth in this shot - nice use of the wider-angle. The dappled patches of light on the plain do a ncie job of keeping the attention focused. In your notes you mention the moody weather. I really would have liked to see more evidence of this - especially in the texture of the clouds. It was expert editting after all so you could have put in soem nice dodging and burning to really emphasise this. Still, 6.2x with no 1s, 2s or 3s is a good outcome.
It is my hope that these insights are helpful and constructive. Please feel free to PM me if you have any questions regarding this critique. And please remember to mark it "Helpful" if you found it so. Good luck with future challenges.
Cheers
Paul |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 05/09/2007 05:06:58 AM |
Dirt Roadby yondermanComment: Greetings from the Critique Club.
Hi Matt,
A good long-exposure shot. Always good to experiment with these. The first thhing I notice about this shot is the apparent inconsistency between the sky and the ground - they juts don't look like they go together. The ground looks as if it was light seperately (although in all likelyhood thsi is as a result of post-processing).
Regarding the post-processing. While I'm note really sure what you did, it looks to me like you were focusing very much on the sky and didn't pay enough attention to how the ground was being impacted - specifically with the green of the grass looking too saturated. You could have masked this out.
Another thing you could have done would be to decrease your aperture to f/10 or so. This would have created flares on your light-sources. If this worked on the stars the sky could have been more engaging.
It is my hope that these insights are helpful and constructive. Please feel free to PM me if you have any questions regarding this critique. And please remember to mark it "Helpful" if you found it so. Good luck with future challenges.
Cheers
Paul |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 05/09/2007 04:55:15 AM |
Transparent Freedomby sweetnessComment: Greetings from the Critique Club.
Hi Lar,
Welcome to DPC! Congratulations on your first submission. It's very brave of you to enter a Free Study for your first submission - the voters are always that much mroe critical because there are no subject limitations.
Others have already commented on the noise and general softness in this image. I'm sure you can see it too, so I won't dwell on what is wrong. Instead I will try to help you understand why this has occurred. looking at your Aperature, ISO and Shutterspeed it is easy for me to understand why there is so much noise. The ISO of 1600 is very high, and almost certian to give this much noise with a D70. so how could you reduce the ISO? After all you need the quick shutterspeed to 'stop' the bird. The answer would be to increase the size of the aperture (a smaller f/number). I'm guessing you were near full zoom for this so you could have gone up to f/5.6. This would have drastically increased the size of the hole to let light through when you made your exposure, and would have allowed you to use a lower ISO - maybe 400.
I note that you don't yet have any editing software. There are some on the web that you can download for free that would help you. GIMP is a shareware photo editting product that is pretty powerful. And NeatImage is a noise removal product that has a free demo version. I recommend you take the tiem to download both. A little bit of sharpening would have worked miracles here.
Keep at it, and hope to see more submissions from you soon.
It is my hope that these insights are helpful and constructive. Please feel free to PM me if you have any questions regarding this critique. And please remember to mark it "Helpful" if you found it so. Good luck with future challenges.
Cheers
Paul |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 05/09/2007 04:39:33 AM |
Lines and Lightby ColeyComment: Greetings from the Critique Club.
Hi Cole,
Congrates on a superb take. I'm personally find the score low, but there you go. What absolutely makes this image for me is the golden light and shadows raking across the fields - beautiful. The shed gived a nice focal point, but isn't really what the shot is about.
So I ask myself what is there not to like? Not a lot really. Perhaps you've hedged your bets a bit with the sky - either more or less. I think a centimeter crop off the bottom and left would have helped, but thats just my opinion. I disagree with the comment below about this needing clouds; I think that would have detracted from the overall starkness.
It is my hope that these insights are helpful and constructive. Please feel free to PM me if you have any questions regarding this critique. And please remember to mark it "Helpful" if you found it so. Good luck with future challenges.
Cheers
Paul |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 05/09/2007 01:59:45 AM |
Uncertain Crossingby neophyteComment: Greetings from the Critique Club.
Hi Dexter,
This is a superb shot. Regardless of how it has scored; if this is your kid then I think you should take the time to get it printed. Th child itself could probably do with a bit more sharpening (at this size anyway, its probably fine at full size). Otherwise - lovely.
I'm sitting here pondering the combined effect of the great leading line/vanishign point of the bridge rail and the bokeh in the background. My initial impression was that I liked it, but the more I look at it the more inclinded I am to agree with adeldegan that it is distracting. The problem for me is that the rail leads the eye away from your subject and straight into the bokeh.
It is my hope that these insights are helpful and constructive. Please feel free to PM me if you have any questions regarding this critique. And please remember to mark it "Helpful" if you found it so. Good luck with future challenges.
Cheers
Paul |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 05/09/2007 01:22:56 AM |
Mike the Eggmanby GeeeComment: Greetings from the Critique Club.
Hi Sharon,
A nice effort - I see what you mean about the gait. You've got a nice characterful chap in the frame, and some nce grainy wood. These, I would say, are the things that you would be wanting to show to your viewers. The lack of detail in the wood is a a big let-down for me. I think this is largely due to the straight-on POV. The first things that I noticed when I opened this shot was the how long and narrow the image was when the subject matter didn't really lean towards such an aspect ration. I'm assuming you went for this crop to include both Mike and the hens on the left. It might have been better to achieve this by shooting from further to the right - that would have brought the two closer together in your frame (and perhaps created soem shadows on the wood). It also would have allowed you to exclude the distracting green grass for the image.
It is my hope that these insights are helpful and constructive. Please feel free to PM me if you have any questions regarding this critique. And please remember to mark it "Helpful" if you found it so. Good luck with future challenges.
Cheers
Paul |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 05/07/2007 10:41:42 AM |
Uneven_odds_logo.jpgby junior_zComment: Hi Anna,
I'm going to post the logo on the team site, just to have soemthing there. Do you object? I note the copyright comment in the title.
Paul |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 05/07/2007 12:39:56 AM |
Another dayby dougi555Comment: Now I really thought this would do better. Seems most folk figure the shots needed to line up better - perhaps use a tripod next time. |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 05/01/2007 09:16:17 PM |
Tryp Out With Poppiesby jonfrommkComment: Or just one poppie, occassionally rotated aand flipped. I do like your presentation of the three images, and the two internal borders. The yellow poppie works best for em. I wonder what the whole would look like if all the images were yellow. |
Photographer found comment helpful. |
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