|
| Group |
Round |
C/R |
Comment |
Date |
Image |
| 27 |
Sep 20 |
Reply |
I quickly pulled this into On1 to adjust color, dynamic range. It does have a bit of fringe which you could take out with time on a clone stamp darkened. But here take a look at the color, and sharpened image. |
Sep 24th |
 |
| 27 |
Sep 20 |
Comment |
I agree that the pano is better. I like the potential of colors here, but I think there is room for some color adjustments. |
Sep 24th |
| 27 |
Sep 20 |
Reply |
The petals on the right are not cut off by the frame. That is a natural shape of a dahlia petal. Take a look above at the black and white version, you can see that even more clearly. I did do some brush work on the stem, but not cloning. |
Sep 24th |
| 27 |
Sep 20 |
Reply |
Got it. Thanks.
Lauren |
Sep 13th |
| 27 |
Sep 20 |
Comment |
Sharp and a good catch. I am not sure I agree with Jon there is a balance between the two flowers; but he is correct there is more depth on the right one. I would consider removing the smaller flower below it that is in shadow. |
Sep 11th |
| 27 |
Sep 20 |
Comment |
Well, this is sort of a punk Midsummer Night's Dream. I am not a portrait photographer, so I haven't a clue how to improve it, and you didn't provide the information on your camera settings, lens, etc. Her skin is very pale, and so the shadows on it give a sort of unearthly effect; the shadows of plants make her part of the forest. Or you could say the light is not very soft. It depends on what you were after. Fairies can be very tricky. I think you could come up with a more interesting title too. |
Sep 11th |
| 27 |
Sep 20 |
Comment |
Very fun shot! Great analogy for getting all steamed up about Covid!! Love the different irons and shapes, patterns of their metal plates. Very creative and made me laugh. |
Sep 11th |
| 27 |
Sep 20 |
Comment |
I can't help but comment that this is close to what Seattle area looks like right now; the smoke from the forest fires in the Eastern part of the state has made the air quality hazardous - basically brown - everywhere.
OK so this is not smoke. It is fog. I suppose you could argue that the sepia tones lend a sense of mystery, but I wonder what a little work with white balance would do with this. I agree the lamppost on the left needs "border patrol" cropping. Great shot considering how disappointed I would be not to see Venice! |
Sep 11th |
| 27 |
Sep 20 |
Comment |
I think the idea of a square crop is a good one, expecially since it lines up the butterfly and the plant on the thirds. Here is a sample of what that would look like. I used a square crop and removed the part of the plant top on the left. |
Sep 11th |
 |
| 27 |
Sep 20 |
Comment |
My Olympus camera has the focus stacking built in as an option and I can choose if I want to do it outside of camera. How is what you are describing - varying shots with exposure - different from HDR? |
Sep 11th |
7 comments - 3 replies for Group 27
|
| 79 |
Sep 20 |
Comment |
Here is an idea that you could play around with the liquify tool. |
Sep 13th |
| 79 |
Sep 20 |
Comment |
Yes, I can see the emotional impact of this image, and feeling of anger and frustration. Edvard Munch in his famous painting "The Scream" impressionist - he made it even more abstract by twisting the image - you could easily do this so that it seems even more insane under Photoshop filters Liquify tool. I like the framing of the tree. |
Sep 13th |
| 79 |
Sep 20 |
Comment |
What a fun image. I love the kaledioscope of colors. Speaking of kaledioscopes, you could tile this into what it would look like through a lens by changing the direction of each tile and it would look like a kaledioscope! |
Sep 13th |
3 comments - 0 replies for Group 79
|
10 comments - 3 replies Total
|