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Showing 241 - 250 of ~654 |
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| 04/19/2004 06:32:14 AM | | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 04/19/2004 06:13:19 AM | | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 04/19/2004 06:11:46 AM | | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 04/19/2004 06:10:21 AM | Descentby BobsterLobsterComment: Great shot, like the tilting ground and the subjects look great. The grass gives the image an edge if you ask me, it makes it a bit more "real". Sky looks amazing, and the blue hue you gave it wow's it. Nice framing, thin blue line underlines the hue gracefully, you did an exellent job, be proud. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 04/19/2004 06:04:41 AM | On the top of the worldby heidaComment: Superb shot. Nice line going from one corner up to the middle. I would have sharpened a tiny bit less, the ground looks a bit too sharp in the lower left corner. Good job (sky looks amazing) | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 04/14/2004 12:10:26 PM | American Valuesby photomComment: Not original at all, think the exact same idea has been done by jmsetzler (might even be a tutorial of it) | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 04/14/2004 11:57:28 AM | Rusty Pipesby Beerme425Comment: Background nice, good gradient. Nice B/W, the pipe could be a bit more lit though. | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 04/14/2004 11:50:24 AM | York's City Wallsby BobsterLobsterComment: Difficult lighting conditions, sky is overexposed and the ground is underexposed. If we could blend layers, exp. bracketing would do the trick. Maybe too much contrast done? | Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 04/14/2004 09:30:03 AM | Racing to the top!by kosmikkreeperComment: *** Greetings from the Critique Club ***
Glad I got this pic to comment on, it's a good one indeed.
Challenge
Since it's a free study, it fits the challenge very nicely. Furthermore, since you could do what ever you liked, coming up with such an original idea really shows what the free studies are all about, this one sticks out.
Composition
You've done a good job on the composition on this one, the space between his feet and the bottom of the frame, and the space on the right gives the viewer the impression he's in mid air and going very fast! Must have been very hard to catch the right moment on this one (I presume he's really jumping), you really did a good job (must have been fun to work on this as well). White background gives the photo a kind of surreal feeling, and was a much better choice IMHO than with a "real-looking" background.
Lighting
Now there is a challenge, catching the texture and tone of the suit, case and paper with a totally white background and probably a very well lit background, you did a great job on it. Two or three pages of paper might have been one tone darker to seperate it from the background, but considering the conditions it's done very nicely. Dark suit show great detail and texture, and you can see every bend on the pages as well! I'd love to see the setup on this one, I could learn a great deal of it.
Camera work
Great stop-motion, no blurring what so ever, and everything in focus as well (shows what good lighting can do). Job well done.
Post-Processing
This is probably the only thing I can critisize, there are a bit of "jagging" where the dark suit contrasts with the background. Your jpeg is as large on the longer side of it, but the image is only 60kb. Maybe if you would have saved with less jpg compression you would ged rid of the jaggies. Good B/W, nice contrast, everything else is perfect.
Title and Info
The title is very descriptive, and gives the image a bit of story around it in only 4 words, simple and effective. Info you gave is also good, but for photo-nerds like myself it would be fun to see the lens used (and at what focal length if zoom), and better yet on a unique (at least on DPC) setup like this it would be fun to see snapshots of the studio and session to see how things are done (not neccesary, just would be a fun bonus)
Overall (my opinion)
Super job, fun shot, an excellent idea for free study. This whole thing has been more a compliment than a critique... I think the march free study had a lot of great shots, and this was one of the better ones, could have finished 1st if you had asked me.
Best regards, Tyrkinn
| Photographer found comment helpful. |
| 04/14/2004 06:57:15 AM | The Fly in the Bushby ImablessedComment: *** Greetings from the Critique Club ***
Hi, these are my thoughts of your "The Fly in the Bush" entry:
Challenge
Since this is a free study, your shot surely fits the challenge. The entry is however not a very original one IMHO, flowers and flies on them are a very common subject on the pages of DPC, and I think it lacks a bit of "wow-factor" to be a really interesting shot.
Composition
In this photo the fly is the main subject, but in my opinion it's too close to the edge. Putting it a bit more to the left and maybe a tiny bit lower would make it a more dominant factor in the frame. It does not help that you took composed the shot differently and cropped a small section out, if you would have composed the shot with the fly in mind you would probably position it differently, the entry looks a bit like it was composed differently when it was taken.
Lighting
Being an outdoor shot (and probably not planned ahead) the light is a bit hard to arrange. Shadows are a bit harsh, although they are not completely black which is good. Some kind of reflector (a white board maybe) or the use of fill-in flash would soften the shadows a bit to make them a smaller factor in the shot (flash can do amazing things in harsh sunlight). Cloudy days are easier to manage (softer shadows)
Camera work
Unfortunately you shot the pic differently first and that causes a few problems. For one thing, you loose resolution when you only use one corner of the captured image. Also, the very edge og the frame is usually a worse spot than spots more towards the middle. Focusing on things on the edge is a challenge as well. Focus seems to be a bit of a trouble with this shot, both the red/pink flowers in the foreground and the fly seems a bit blurry. Unfortunately I cant see your aperture and shutter settings, but a smaller aperture (larger F-number) would probably help to make a larger depth of field and hence the fly and the plants could all be properly focused. (magnetic9999 made a great tutorial about Depth of field: //www.dpchallenge.com/tutorial.php?TUTORIAL_ID=1 )
Post-Processing
This photo looks like its pretty much unedited, except for the crop. Small adjustments in photoshop or similar software could have helped a bit. Maybe some sharpening could have helped, and levels would have helped as well (maybe even auto-levels that you can find in most editing software).
Title and Info
The title is descriptive, but could maybe be more creative for my taste. The Photograph information is lacking, it's always a good idea to include at least the Aperture, ISO and Shutter settings that you can find in exif info (can see in most browsing software, probably in programs that came with your camera). It's good that you explained what you did with the cropping, it gives you a better idea how the image was shot.
Overall (my opinion)
I think that if you intended to shoot the fly at the beginning you would have made a better shot. The flowers look better than the fly in this crop, and altough the title indicates the fly is the subject the photo does not show it well enough. Something extraordinary is missing to make the shot rememberable. A different angle might be good, shooting from the right sight making the flowers be the background and the fly in the forground is one idea, then you wouldn't need more DOF, a shallower DOF would maybe be better if the angle was different. It's always a good idea to keep the weeks challenge in mind when shooting, you might see something that really fits the task.
Hope this helps you, keep shooting and submitting.
(please excuse the spelling and grammar, english is not my native language)
Best regards, Tyrkinn | Photographer found comment helpful. |
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