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| Group |
Round |
C/R |
Comment |
Date |
Image |
| 72 |
Oct 17 |
Reply |
Lens coma is what came to mind for me, Kent. The left/right imbalance suggests a decentered lens. I'll be curious to hear what your contact says. There are a number of ways to check for decentering- Mr. Google can help if you're interested.
The crop would be a trade-off but I thought there was a point where it would not seriously effect the MW.
I also had a second thought and wondered if you could recover a bit of detail in the pine trees. |
Oct 10th |
| 72 |
Oct 17 |
Comment |
You nailed the focus, Isaac. The crop makes the bee the anchor but also shows-off the details of the flower. The noise in the green background is a bit distracting. Selective NR or blurring in PS might reduce this. |
Oct 10th |
| 72 |
Oct 17 |
Comment |
Can't have too many stars for my taste, Kent. My only nit would be to crop from the top to eliminate the elongated stars in the upper corners. |
Oct 10th |
| 72 |
Oct 17 |
Comment |
Neat shot, Mary. The HDR works well here. I find forest scenes to be very hard. The challenge is finding a comp that has a strong foreground and an element that anchors the eye. |
Oct 10th |
| 72 |
Oct 17 |
Comment |
Abihijeet, you are having some fine wildlife opportunities. I imagine this had to be a very quick shot. More room behind would be ideal; but cropping more off the front is a good idea, IMO. |
Oct 10th |
4 comments - 1 reply for Group 72
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4 comments - 1 reply Total
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