• Members 523 posts
    Aug. 31, 2023, 3:53 p.m.

    I love Lou's response about feeling a person could walk out from the sea onto the beach. I very much like the triangle of water separating beach from sky. More impactful than horizontal lines of all, I think.

  • Members 861 posts
    Aug. 31, 2023, 4:21 p.m.

    All in camera. The only post work was color shifting and contrast stuff. It's the same process as the last one with a dichroic sheet of vinyl on top. I need to try some ICM ideas with this and figure out how to get better control. I need something less fun house mirror to start with.

  • Members 689 posts
    Aug. 31, 2023, 9:46 p.m.

    Thank you everybody who looked and commented on my images. There is one more image from inside that well. Took me 7 years to come back and take this one. The writings on the wall are names of the people killed during Holocaust. You can submit names and they will put them on the wall. My mother's in law parents have been killed in the ghetto in Ukraine. Now their names are on this wall.

    Vacation 14-07-13_058-Edit-2.jpg

    Vacation 14-07-13_058-Edit-2.jpg

    JPG, 2.2 MB, uploaded by Sagittarius on Aug. 31, 2023.

  • Members 1662 posts
    Aug. 31, 2023, 10:06 p.m.

    Wow... a great capture of what I perceive as an impactful and devastating monument! Don't have much to say honestly... it's just that: devastating, with all those names in the background, each one robbed of all the potential. I'm really sorry to hear your family has been affected by it as well. Great that you got their names on.

  • Members 1376 posts
    Sept. 1, 2023, 8:05 a.m.

    Each of these benefits from being viewed at a larger size.
    1 & 2 give scale.
    3 has textures I like in the water in the pool. The water fall into the pool is like a sheet of slumped glass that becomes a bubbling froth. Maybe consider coming in to make these two things dominant in the image?
    The incoming sky of 1 contrasts with the rush of water and suggests that more is on the way.

  • Members 782 posts
    Sept. 1, 2023, 8:13 a.m.

    Really interesting shot, creating a lot of questions and inspiring to think about possible scenarios. To me it seems highly likely that someone took the 'brick and mortar store' descriptor too literally... 😉

    I like the light and composition as well as the overall mood of the image. The shadow of the rail onto the bricks is a striking detail, surely worthy of a separate image from a different angle (which perhaps you even took...) I would try how it looks if the bricked-up doorway would be placed completely parallel to the frame... might work, might not!
    [/quote]
    You are right. I took a second version but it is quite different. Still thinking Led Zep. The stairway not chosen.
    [/quote]

    MY ADDITION (ROEL) :
    I like the secondary images actually much more than the one originally posted.
    The figure (Suzette?) in striking red, with a red umbrella, used indoors, creates a weird but wonderfully mysterious effect that adds not only scale to the environment, but also human interest and a strong focal point.

  • Members 1376 posts
    Sept. 1, 2023, 8:17 a.m.

    This wouldn't have worked nearly as well if the photographer had posed the subjects with vertical people and a level horizon. It would have felt static.
    Here are lines coming in from the corners in both the foreground and background. The association of the photo with the subject can't be missed.
    Definitely a photographic moment.

  • Members 782 posts
    Sept. 1, 2023, 8:18 a.m.

    Agree.
    Superb image in which the addition of what usually would be considered an unwelcome distraction (traffic indications on the ground) is a stroke of genius.

    I have found that in urban environments, traffic paint on the roads can often be used as a geometrical element in the frame.
    (Zebra crossings in particular can be excellent diagonal leading lines when shot with wide angle and close enough.)

    This takes that idea and dances a tango with it, taking it a step further.

  • Members 782 posts
    Sept. 1, 2023, 8:24 a.m.

    Minnie,

    Your comment made my day (and that day wasn't half bad to begin with).

    If my photography of succeeds once in a while to "embody the intriguing way we weave our human stories together across culture and geography", then I will die a happy and satisfied man.
    For me, there is no greater purpose to photography than just that : to show how diverse the population of this earth is, and still how fundamentally the same everywhere.

    You could not have given me a nicer compliment.

    (Like I say it on my web pages :
    My main passion and focus is to show authentic people in extraordinary situations.
    That is what really makes my heart beat faster.
    )

  • Members 1376 posts
    Sept. 1, 2023, 8:39 a.m.

    I cheated. Trying to get an insight into what you did here, I went to the FlickR page and snooped around. Some clues, but it didn't help much. The lens choice is probably important as well?
    Nothink like a story comes to mind. Just lines and colour that are pleasurable.

  • Members 1376 posts
    Sept. 1, 2023, 8:40 a.m.

    Perfect minniev.

  • Members 1376 posts
    Sept. 1, 2023, 8:44 a.m.

    Or that perhaps some paths turn out not to be the best route?

  • Members 132 posts
    Sept. 1, 2023, 5:26 p.m.

    I thought the previous one was more tasteful and resembled a Karel Appel from the Dutch Cobra group and Karel Appel has also made a name for itself in America. This one strikes me more as an aquarium with small goldfishes. Anyway a good try.
    Lou

  • Members 1556 posts
    Sept. 2, 2023, 1:50 a.m.

    Stairway to art! Very nice shot of an authentic art hideaway, taken from a perfect angle to capture the space itself as art. Excellent

  • Members 149 posts
    Sept. 2, 2023, 2:04 a.m.

    Sometimes, it just leads nowhere, bridge to nowhere, barrier to entry, do not pass go, do not collect $100.

    I like this image is squared and the light both pulls you into the stair but the darkness in the corner helps make it feel denied.
    I think the feel could be enhanced by one of two ways. Make it 2D and have the stair end in the upper right of the image.
    Example I found on the web with a different subject:

    alternatively, just move the stairs into the upper right of this image and maybe cut them off partially, so the viewer can't see everything to add tension and make the image more unsettling.
    Example I found on the web with a different subject:

  • Members 1556 posts
    Sept. 2, 2023, 2:06 a.m.

    You are right. I took a second version but it is quite different. Still thinking Led Zep. The stairway not chosen.
    [/quote]

    Nothing spices up a shot like a woman with a red umbrella. Only after you posted this version was I sure this scene was not shot indoors like Whynot's. The first could have been either.

    On another photo forum far far away we once ran a fun share thread for about a year where we practiced compositing by each participant adding a red umbrella to some scene we'd shot, and a few lines of story to explain the mystery, romance or crime involved. When I see red umbrellas I still find myself thinking up a story line.

  • Members 1556 posts
    Sept. 2, 2023, 2:12 a.m.

    It does look like a miniature tornado. I think I would do some cropping so the little guy would have more impact. I'd crop the blurred arc on the lower left and most of the grass, ending up with a square composition