|
Image |
Comment |
| 03/29/2008 11:30:44 AM | Just Not Very Brightby banmornComment: This made me laugh... While looking at this photo, I have to take a position, a role, and considering the challenge, I think of myself as the police man. Well, the only place I've seen the mugshot genre is at the smoking gun, so... Now, I feel bad for arresting this guy.
A very smart and lighthearted presentation. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 03/10/2008 01:49:37 PM | Bank Shot, Side Railby GeneralEComment: Nice study of collisions and reflections. It's a very smart choice that there are two colours. Again, a very good example that I'd like to see in a physics textbook. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 03/10/2008 01:44:22 PM | | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 03/03/2008 02:39:09 AM | Anatomy of a Linkby shamerComment: Better, the tilt gives it more tension. The one you entered is quite balanced. This one is more dynamic. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/20/2008 03:08:24 AM | Kung Hei Fat Choi!by GordonComment: O man, I thougt it is Yun-Fat Chow doing some Kung Fu here... now I see it is the celebration of the New Year...
This is good, much more interesting, good experiment. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/18/2008 02:23:05 AM | River of Goldby MelonMusketeerComment: OOOOOO, WOW, this is beautiful! There are two different images here, the sky and the trees, in one side, and the water and the ripples, waves, on the other. I understand that it is difficult having a sharp photo with a 6.7 aperture, but I wish there was a bit more definition on the far field, like the clouds and the trees. The water itself is beautiful, it would be beautiful to have the lower part of the photo on a physics textbook. And the colours are beautiful, very nice, dynamic and appeased at the same time. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/16/2008 10:40:20 PM | _LTS2002w.jpgby LevTComment: I think this is an example of the esence of photography: a play of light, shadows, rhythm, and a guy on a bicycle. Very beautiful! | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/14/2008 09:11:44 PM | hyperopiaby GordonComment: I see this fost-focusing technique as a way of peeling the meanings and interpretations from a photo to reach to the image. See, for example, in "archetype", all the information about the building is removed, and all I get to see is the shape and geometry, which is enough for a pleasant experience, it's a nice new way at looking at the interaction of the building with the space (although, in this particular case, the space is the sky).
Not here. In this case, this photo, I think, is a failure. I can't see anything interesting, pleasant, or engaging in the shape, colour, or even message, that will make this photo become an image. Too little thought and passion and imagination has gone into producing this thing, hence it offers too little.
I leave the door open, and go to look if I am suffering from hyperopia. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/07/2008 08:00:45 AM | | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 02/07/2008 07:59:16 AM | | Photographer found comment helpful. |
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: 04/01/2025 11:23:24 PM EDT.
|