I’m not responsible for your perception of my feelings about your images, Jeremy.
I don’t have any like or dislike towards your pictures, I find the applause not helpfully in a critique section. Especially not when it is applauding the person and not the work.
You don’t need to give me instructions to what I have to respond, I always give answer to fair questions.
Read what I explained in earlier post.
Before pushing the button, find the dominant composition lines in the scene and in combination with focal length and position you can prevent the skewed impression of the composition. It’s nothing in Post processing, it’s in the making.
When I ask why you made the picture it is not to look down on you or the picture, it is to genuinely understand what the purpose is.
If you wanted to shoot the sun seeker in two extreme lighting situations and nothing more, I had no remark.
Normally I don’t give comments on this kind of pictures, it’s like landscape, I don’t know enough about it. But this touches something I know about because I shoot interiors and real estate: how to deal with visual balans in perspective distortion prone scenes.
What I try to explain was told too me as well. And that little insight improved the way I compose images where perspective lines can make a scene a bit tricky to frame.