|
| Group |
Round |
C/R |
Comment |
Date |
Image |
| 70 |
Oct 20 |
Comment |
Thank you all for your very kind remarks. I think we were very lucky to be there the right time and at the right place. |
Oct 16th |
| 70 |
Oct 20 |
Comment |
Frans:
I love this image!!
Very impactful. I cropped the left side a bit to give the image more balance. Also, I brought out the beautiful texture of the tree trunk by increase the shadow exposure. |
Oct 16th |
 |
| 70 |
Oct 20 |
Comment |
A lovely bucolic shot. You might want to go back there and capture the same image when the light is softer, dawn or dusk.
I have cropped and compressed your image with a new look; just playing around. It is not necessary any better than the original. Thoughts? |
Oct 16th |
 |
| 70 |
Oct 20 |
Comment |
Kathryn:
Very interesting capture. I wonder what is the surrounding landscape, especially in the badlands territory, on both sides of this triangular object. They might otherwise provide this image more scale and give the viewer a sense of location.
I wonder if you could have shot this image with F/11, although you would need a longer shutter and higher iso, the moon could become a star. |
Oct 16th |
| 70 |
Oct 20 |
Comment |
I agree with the above comments. The BW conversion helps distilling the otherwise busy image to just lines and different tonalities.
Well done! |
Oct 16th |
| 70 |
Oct 20 |
Comment |
The waves with colorful reflection of the sky are your main subjection of interest. I wonder whether you could just zoom into the waves and make it into a BW abstract. Or you can add a few water fowls onto the barren sky. Just playing around with ideas. |
Oct 16th |
 |
| 70 |
Oct 20 |
Comment |
Lamar:
Well captured Night Herons in perfect symmetry, both in their perched location as well as their beaks' direction. Although I am not a portrait/ fashion photographer, I do find that with portraits, as in this case animal portraits, it is best to have a shallowed depth of field. The blurred background makes the contrasting bird images sharper and creating a focal point.
The blurred the railing which serves as leading lines could either be sharp or blur; they don't bother me either way. |
Oct 16th |
7 comments - 0 replies for Group 70
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7 comments - 0 replies Total
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