Luminous Landscape Forum
The Art of Photography => User Critiques => Topic started by: dwood on February 15, 2010, 07:34:11 pm
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Here's the deal with this one: I have a similar picture in b&w. In the b&w version, there's a small lobster boat on the left/front, and there's no foreground. The lobster boat isn't in this frame but the foreground is. Question to you folks is...do you think the foreground in this pic adds value or is a distraction? All comments, as always, are welcome.
(http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4054/4360338983_f61aea5527_o.jpg)
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Well, everyone gets an opinion. Personally I find it distracting from the wonderful ethereal feel of the clouds and background. I'd remove it. Some might find it anchoring, though.
Mike.
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Well, everyone gets an opinion. Personally I find it distracting from the wonderful ethereal feel of the clouds and background. I'd remove it. Some might find it anchoring, though.
Mike.
Thanks for your vote on the foreground bit Mike. I have mixed feelings about it myself.
The version below has the foreground with a bit more light. Thought it needed it. Okay, keep the critiques coming folks.
(http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4052/4361328022_5ab4b23d1c_o.jpg)
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Nope....
No foreground needed here....IMO
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Nope....
No foreground needed here....IMO
Well, that's two votes against. Thanks for your input Joe.
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There isn't enough foreground interest to justify any inclusion.
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To my eye the sky is more interesting than the shore in the foreground, so I'd crop out the foreground about a third to half way between the shore and the island.
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Well, that's two votes against. Thanks for your input Joe.
Make it three! Certainly, if you leave it in, don't make it lighter.
Jeremy
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no foreground...thanks for the input folks
(http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2794/4362393272_1d792b217d_o.jpg)
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no foreground...thanks for the input folks
Doug,
Any chance we can see one a little darker too?
I suspect it might benefit from it. There's no detail to speak of in the trees and mountain in the back, so let it go darker. I think the sky and water might benefit from it.
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Here's a dissenting view: I'd like to keep just a tiny bit of the foreground as an anchor. I would crop it like this:
[attachment=20297:cropped.jpg]
I would also try darkening it a bit (I cropped but did nothing else).
Eric
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Here's a dissenting view: I'd like to keep just a tiny bit of the foreground as an anchor. I would crop it like this:
[attachment=20297:cropped.jpg]
I would also try darkening it a bit (I cropped but did nothing else).
Eric
I like this version a lot. I can't yet decide between this one or Doug's latest version but in any case, both are better than the original.
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Doug,
Any chance we can see one a little darker too?
I suspect it might benefit from it. There's no detail to speak of in the trees and mountain in the back, so let it go darker. I think the sky and water might benefit from it.
Joe - this one's a tad bit darker, but not too much. I wonder if your monitor is a bit brighter than mine. I wouldn't want to go darker than this, at least as far as what I'm seeing on my end. Let me know what you see with this one.
(http://farm5.static.flickr.com/4050/4362094021_48203ef589_o.jpg)
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Joe - this one's a tad bit darker, but not too much. I wonder if your monitor is a bit brighter than mine. I wouldn't want to go darker than this, at least as far as what I'm seeing on my end. Let me know what you see with this one.
Doug,
When you said "a bit" you really meant a bit
I'm not trying to to convince you one way or the other but to my eyes the image begs for that really saturated, almost over the top look. Let the trees and mountain go black. You've got plenty of colour in the image, so don't touch the saturation.
This might not be a "portfolio keeper" but if you make it dramatic, I bet you'll get lots of oohs and aahs from visitors (assuming you have it framed and on display in your house or office)
And after all, we all like oohs and aahs
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Doug,
When you said "a bit" you really meant a bit
I'm not trying to to convince you one way or the other but to my eyes the image begs for that really saturated, almost over the top look. Let the trees and mountain go black. You've got plenty of colour in the image, so don't touch the saturation.
This might not be a "portfolio keeper" but if you make it dramatic, I bet you'll get lots of oohs and aahs from visitors (assuming you have it framed and on display in your house or office)
And after all, we all like oohs and aahs
Thanks Joe. I'll toy with it a bit more.
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I think Eric nailed it - beautiful image just got better.
Seamus