Thank you very much for your appreciation, but I had some problems during this period, I am not feeling well and I am not in the mood to deal with this problem, because I should be looking for an interesting image. I hope you can understand this. I will try to prepare something for a possible next time.🙂
OK, understood - but you have to win again for that :)
Fortunately we have got many good edits.
Our second best was @ErikWithaK brilliant processing of the beautiful carpet - thereby Erik has to start next round now. Congratulations! I sincereley hope that he has got no excuses to skip his chance.
Apparently I should not have written that - because Erik too asked me to skip his turn and choose another user to host the next round.
Now we have a bit trouble - there are two images in the queue, both scored two likes and both pretty good versions.
At my sole discretion (based on the rules) I select Alan's image then - I like details and his selected furniture object (how that will be called in English, BTW?) is very well processed to show all this work done by crafting such a beautiful object.
This means that Alan, you have to host next round :)
PS. Don't ask why Alan's post has "... -1 other users like this" next to "Like" button - I don't know. Most likely it is some glitch in database, not affecting voters list and count.
In the case of multiple objects such as chairs, we could use scene position as a qualifier e.g. 'right-most chair crop' or 'camera-right chair crop'.
This usage is perhaps more American English than English English and many native English speakers are tending to use American grammar in these days of global internet, rather than proper English grammar.