• Members 787 posts
    April 21, 2023, 8:19 a.m.

    I get a distinct feeling of infinity here.
    It looks like a setting for an action set piece in a sci-fi movie about a dystopian future society.

  • Members 1588 posts
    April 21, 2023, 2:49 p.m.

    I will confess that I'm finding it hard to like this one once I get past the pretty white flower. The color of the blurred parts is a put off for me, but I have a dislike for purple and magenta so I may not be a fair reviewer on this one. This may be a matter of personal taste, but I found the image more pleasing when I desaturated it and applied a LUT. Then I find I like it quite well and can appreciate the symmetrical blur that becomes part of the composition, leading the eye in a circular pattern around the well defined flower.

    dscf9286-20.jpg

    dscf9286-20.jpg

    JPG, 256.6 KB, uploaded by minniev on April 21, 2023.

  • Members 523 posts
    April 21, 2023, 3:09 p.m.

    I very much like the idea and the limited colors! Cropping to a square gives me more of a feeling of being fully enveloped by the soft foliage.
    edit dscf9286-20.jpg

    edit dscf9286-20.jpg

    JPG, 716.0 KB, uploaded by LindaS on April 21, 2023.

  • Members 787 posts
    April 21, 2023, 3:26 p.m.

    I don't think the desaturation is an improvement.
    The purple hues do not bother me. They create a mournful atmosphere. The flower comes to represent a slice of hope in the midst of grief or mourning.
    It is not an upbeat image and the colour treatment is odd (like the church previously), but it forces me to think.
    It tells me that realism is not the alpha and omega of photography.
    I still would not buy any of the two images to hang on my wall (or accept them as a screensaver on my computer). But they are at least interesting.

  • Members 787 posts
    April 21, 2023, 3:31 p.m.

    Both have a strange, surreal, dreamlike quality.

    The second creates the impression of the bottle cap being hurled into the air by a stream of bubbles.

    The first reminded me a lot of M.C. Escher, the dutch graphic artist, with his impossible constructions.
    The cap seems inside the bottleneck, but simultaneously outside of it.
    So Escher or maybe also Möbius.

    Both present an odd view and a photograph that is quite different from the kind of realistic documentary photography that I usually prefer.
    But like Jim Kasson's guitar, I am intrigued and forced to reconsider my preferences and that is good.

  • Members 787 posts
    April 21, 2023, 3:33 p.m.

    Yup, the background does you no favours.
    I don't mind the actual background, but I am bothered by the round shape of the pipe pointing in our direction, but it is such an attention magnet that I don't even see the dog's eyes anymore. Your description had me look at them, but I had to forcibly concentrate to see past the pipe.

  • Members 787 posts
    April 21, 2023, 3:35 p.m.

    I do like images that are like puzzles.
    Images that combine planes of glass, mirrors, reflections, shadows, ghosts of other sideways reflections etc.
    When done well (i.e. when the components work harmoniously together) they create a feeling of 1+1=3.
    I can't say that this one will enter into the pantheon of my all time favourites, but it is not bad.
    Maybe not 1+1=3 but 1+1=2.50.
    And that should be good enough.

  • Members 787 posts
    April 21, 2023, 3:39 p.m.

    The odd proportions of house and sky must certainly be a conscious choice, but I am not really on board here.
    And I was wondering why that was.
    I can't come up with any other explanation than the fact that I subconscously know where the man's feet are, respective to his upper body.
    And then it may sound odd, but I feel like his (invisible) feet are really too close to the bottom edge.
    And no, that is a DIFFERENT thing than just saying that I wanted to see more of the house.
    It's the shape and size of the person that throws the balance off, for me.

  • Members 787 posts
    April 21, 2023, 3:42 p.m.

    So glad to see the dam birds return, and not just to the dam, or to your photo-taking, but to our weekly gathering.
    Your poetic compositions of light, water, spray, fragile birds and brutalistic concrete have always been a true highlight of our gatherings over on the previous site.
    I am glad that the dam birds have found a new home and haven.
    I look forward to seeing many many more.
    The individual image?
    A moment of magic frozen in time.
    That sounds like a lot (and it is) but for Minniev that is just another day at the office.

  • Members 787 posts
    April 21, 2023, 3:45 p.m.

    Well, from the photo data it is clear that you DID consider a title : "Pool of Uncertainty".
    I think that does not speak much. It feels a bit like forcing meaning onto the viewer.
    Untitled is better: let the viewer make up his/her mind.
    For me, the image lacks a real handle, a clear point of focus or interest.
    And oddly, the reflections make the water look hugely pixellated.
    And I mean that in a mega way, not on the pixel level.
    The way the colours get refracted really feels like the natural equivalent of pixelation.

  • Members 787 posts
    April 21, 2023, 3:50 p.m.

    Hello Linda, and welcome.
    Nice to have you.

    I am a bit late with my welcome, but life and work got in the way the past few days.
    I am catching up, but thankfully Minniev has been the most loyal keeper of the fort (as she always is).

    We hope to see much more from you, because this first showing is utterly promising.
    It is an IR-type conversion (interesting) of a plant macro.
    Now, you must know that plants are usually not my main interest (cats are even worse).
    But this one triggers so many associations.
    I see strands of DNA revolving and trying to create life.
    I see amoebes carving our their territory.
    I see alien life forms getting ready to invade.
    (This must be a reference to the "Alien" prequel "Prometheus" that is popping up in my mind, wherein the spores of alien parasites are inhaled and then wreak havoc on the host. Enough to create a lifelong phobia of pollen...)
    Associations and references are good.
    It means that the image gets my head spinning and my cultural juices flowing.
    More of that, please.

  • Members 787 posts
    April 21, 2023, 3:52 p.m.

    A peaceful scene. Two boats passing (with the sailboat maybe a bit too close to the top edge?)
    And the highlight and focal point of the image, is a human hand: an expression of expressiveness.

  • Members 861 posts
    April 21, 2023, 4:50 p.m.

    I wouldn't buy them either. :) These are "I need to see what happens when I try something" shots. Everything about the setup is wrong and not ideal, but it's what I've currently got to work with. The colors just sorta happen. It started ooc as a blinding red (so that part of the idea failed), then I tried some blue, did some b&w, weird blending techniques, and it just doesn't feel right no matter what. It became a matter of something bad is better than nothing good.

    What do you think would have made it more upbeat? I had not even considered any emotional tone with the color, but your assessment feels very true, and because of personal reasons, perhaps I am subconsciously projecting something unintentionally.

  • Members 523 posts
    April 21, 2023, 7 p.m.

    Wow, Roel, what a marvelous welcome! I had just finished reading your poetic response to MinnieV's dam bird (I've known her online since before her award and exhibit, so I've enjoyed the dam birds for many years). I'm delighted by your reaction to my seed pods! Looking forward to spending quality time with all you folks.

  • Members 21 posts
    April 21, 2023, 11:58 p.m.

    Great photo. The young men walking demonstrates energy, confidence and purpose. Although they are striding out of the image - the front fellow looking back into the image which draws your eye back into the image to the clean lines of the white wall and blue artwork that looks to be floating across the image.

  • Members 711 posts
    April 22, 2023, 1:27 a.m.

    [quote="@RoelHendrickx"]
    [quote="@Rich42"]
    Condo Man-SM.jpg
    Condo Man

    Roel and Mike,

    Thank you very much for looking at the image and the thoughtful critiques.

    I should not have named the image "Condo Man." I realized that shortly after I posted. The title draws too much attention to the male figure. He appeared just as I was taking the picture, and brought some additional interest, but, in my mind the image is about the building. "Blue Condo" would have served better.

    I saw the image as a collection of angles flowing from right to left. I kept the (visible part of) the building low in the frame to try for a minimalist look, tied in with the patch of blue sky at the very top, picking up the predominately blue hues in the shingles. Unfortunately, that tie in is much weaker (non-existent?) the way the image shows here. It is much stronger in Photoshop on my monitor. It's an issue of the original being in ProPhotoRGB color space and the forum effectively forcing use of an sRGB profile, which it then ignores and lets everyone's browser display the image as a presumed sRGB image.

    It prints very well on matte stock with dye inks.

    Again, much thanks for the feedback.

    I like these threads!

    Rich

  • Members 787 posts
    April 22, 2023, 2:03 a.m.

    Hi Linda, I’ve also known Minniev for many years and I know ALL about her dam birds, their evolution, the award and exhibit.

    In fact that is one of the most rewarding stories I have seen emerge from our 15 year long C&C history and it makes me proud with her. I love that woman although we never met in person.

    A word of caution: regular participation in this thread can cause real (and not just internet) friendship. Just ask Mike Fewster.

    I can say this now because he is defenseless, on his way by plane from Adelaide to Rome to go harvest south-Italian images.