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Read my mind!
Read my mind!
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Photograph Information Photographer's Comments
Challenge: Indecision (Advanced Editing II)
Camera: Nikon D70
Location: Maryborough, Queensland, Australia
Date: Nov 2, 2004
Aperture: F4.0
ISO: 200
Shutter: 1/60
Galleries: Animals, Persuasive
Date Uploaded: Nov 2, 2004

My dog jazz, Australian Kelpie / Blue Cattle cross loves to play ball in the afternoon.

Print available is of the Winning entry from the Nikon "Animal Love" entry that was re-cropped for that competition.

Very few adjustments.
RAW adjustments
shadow/highlight
Brightness/contrast
Burn over a highlighted area now cropped out.
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Statistics
Place: 52 out of 108
Avg (all users): 5.1243
Avg (commenters): 6.5714
Avg (participants): 4.8529
Avg (non-participants): 5.2821
Views since voting: 1385
Views during voting: 287
Votes: 185
Comments: 10
Favorites: 0


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AuthorThread
11/01/2007 07:03:02 AM
OMG .. !! .. this is just excellent .. I LOVE HER EYES .. they do look very katee-ish .. !! .. AND THE BALL .. it looks all eaten away .. our dogs, both sasha and katee, tear all the outside material off tennis balls and they're left BALD !!! .. i love this photograph for her eyes and her wonderful expression, the way she's looking right at you, and the ball of course . !! ..:)

Message edited by author 2007-11-01 07:04:02.
  Photographer found comment helpful.
02/17/2005 08:38:40 AM
Wonderful picture, makes me miss having a dog.
  Photographer found comment helpful.
11/24/2004 10:18:31 AM
Great initial impact - the dog, the eyes. The shallow DoF and fall-off to the background also add to this effect of being 'in your face' Very effective. However, the left side of the shot just doesn't work for me, with the square and pencil - they lead my eye out of the scene - particularly the bright yellow and reds in the pencil and the line shape they form pointing away from the subject and off the page to the left.

This can be helped a whole lot by cropping the shot square, around the dog. The right hand two thirds of the image are strong enough and with a centered crop the dog is the real focus of the shot.

Now following convention, you should use rule of thirds, right ? Well the reason is that if you have a subject bang in the center of the frame it takes all the attention, is very arresting, static and generally dominates the composition. In this case - that is what is happening anyway. If you compose it in a square frame by cropping the left third - you'll get an even stronger, more arresting scene. The elements in it build to that effect, the composition will enhance that and I think it'll be stronger all around.

After doing that, you are still left with the piece of wood jutting in from the left - which does still clutter it a bit, but I think this crop would make for a much stronger image - try it and see how you like it! Then maybe try and re-create this sort of image, with just the green grass background and without the other elements - try the off center and very centered/ square compositions with those as well and see which you prefer.
  Photographer found comment helpful.
 Comments Made During the Challenge
11/08/2004 07:14:15 PM
What a great face.! And such a clear shot. I bet the decision here was made for you.
  Photographer found comment helpful.
11/06/2004 10:27:09 AM
great sharpness in the face. It's exactly where it needs to be! I just find the left side of the frame to be a bit distracting (the tool), but it's definately a cute shot! Don't really think of this as "indecision" but, Maybe you are thinking "should I play, or should I work?" Good job :)
  Photographer found comment helpful.
11/05/2004 10:22:31 PM
Funny shot and good DOF, but it looks like the dog's mind is pretty well made up. ;-)
  Photographer found comment helpful.
11/04/2004 10:29:46 PM
At first, I just kept staring at the work bench. Then I noticed the eyes and after a couple of seconds, it grew on me. Play. 8
  Photographer found comment helpful.
11/04/2004 04:40:11 PM
Ah, I have one of those. One track mind :-D
  Photographer found comment helpful.
11/03/2004 09:10:19 AM
Great focus on the dog. Maybe needs a bit more focus on the work as well? Great photo.
  Photographer found comment helpful.
11/03/2004 08:22:51 AM
Normally I would make some obnoxous comment about the stuff in the foreground being too distracting but since I have a dog that gets really interested in tennis balls when I have a project going on -- I total know this picture. (of course the blurry stuff is distracting -- a simpler set up with a bit less green would have had me focus on that pleading face even more!) Hopefully you've mentioned the dog's name and breed in your notes. Thanks for the smile.
  Photographer found comment helpful.


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