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| Group |
Round |
C/R |
Comment |
Date |
Image |
| 25 |
Oct 19 |
Comment |
I really like the curves and the colors, especially the way you caught not only the sun on the formation, but also the reflection of the sky in the foreground. I prefer your original because it retains the delicacy of the light reaching down into the canyon. |
Oct 17th |
| 25 |
Oct 19 |
Comment |
I like the colors and the painterly effect. The effect of the long exposure capturing the light spilling out of the windows is really neat. I'm not sure I understand what rotating the lens actually did. It would be really neat to see a straight photograph of the scene to see the difference. |
Oct 12th |
| 25 |
Oct 19 |
Comment |
I wasn't sure I liked the backward-leaning aspect of the butterfly, so I tried rotating it. That didn't really work at all. I really like the contrasting colors of the wing and the flowers. I'm not sure what made the center swath of the background appear white; looks like it something was cloned over. But I think your handling of the depth of field to get the entire butterfly and just enough flowers in focus is spot on. |
Oct 12th |
| 25 |
Oct 19 |
Comment |
I love the way the shadow separates the scorpion's body from the background, as well as the way the tones and shades of color work together. |
Oct 12th |
| 25 |
Oct 19 |
Comment |
You sort of guess right, but not exactly. Tripods were not allowed because of the crowds, but monopods were allowed. A monopod is just what it says -- a one-legged "tripod." As such it is not as rock-solid as a tripod, but it definitely takes out several degrees of motion, and allows for longer exposures. These structures are so bright that long exposures are not necessary in any case, but the monopod really helps keep the camera steady (and doubles as a walking stick as well). |
Oct 12th |
5 comments - 0 replies for Group 25
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5 comments - 0 replies Total
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