Thanks for spotting this shot and the comment Chris. I had missed it completely. Permit me to sigh again about flat view.
It is indeed a great shot.
Consider the figures. We are looking at, I think, a reflection. There is just enough detail to suggest the age of the subjects and that ddas poignancy. We have hints of glasses and hairstyles and they are looking steadily at each other. The point of touching is quite exquisite - a solitary overlap at the tips of the hands. The man's jacket with the lower edge flare accentuated by the ironwork is perfect. The positioning of the ironwork relative to the figures frames them and uses lines to bring them together. How could the sharp feature with the attached awirls that is placed on the woman be bettered? The Gold browns and blues are always a good combination but here they hint at nostalgia, night and life. Having both figures in the golden rectangle with the blue close to the woman's shoulder - too perfect for words.
Absolutely not an image where the grain/noise should be cleaned up. It becomes an important part of the mood. Icing on a delicious creation..
This is a photographic masterpiece and I don't use the term lightly.
What I like in the original and the single shot version is that they better convey the size of the travertine field. It's a subject made for panoramas.
Was the stitched version done with a sweep mode or did you PP stitch the images together? Generally the programs like ICE are very very good at lining up the overlaps.
Love this photo, but I have a complaint: the bright white vertical "bar" on the left of the photo. Were it me, I'd darken that a bit to blend in with the middle section of the wall. The dark "bar" on the right works due to its size, but the light "bar" on the left is "too thin", making it a bit unbalanced. Regardless, I really like the photo!
I did not really notice, at first, the big reach between the blacks and the whites in this image, but now that my attention has been drawn to it, I cannot unsee it. Especially the stark white is a bit jarring. It also looks like your dragged a brightening mask from the left over it, with too harsh a value.
Looking back on the image with fresh eyes, I think it would lend itself quite well to a square format crop, eliminating all of that too-bright area on the left and some of the pure dark on the right.
Thanks for the comments about the white area on the left side.
I probably could do a bit of cropping and further tone editing. The wall looks brighter on the left because there's a 45 degree angle there and the wall is coming toward the viewer and catching much more of the suns rays, which are from the right. The contrast is much greater here in the forum display of the image than in Photoshop on my monitor. Something about the way the forum's software handles JPEGs? Seeing that difference, I didn't quite know how it would display on others' monitors.
I don't convert images to B&W too much. My overall workflow is always Adobe Bridge -> ACR -> Photoshop. I can do the BW conversion in Adobe Camera Raw or Photoshop. I can't remember in which I did this conversion. I think it was ACR. Adobe updates these programs constantly and unexpectedly. Recently I've been getting a brief error message after conversion that there is a profile mismatch. Photoshop notes it, then deals with the image and all seems well. I've tried to track down the error, but it's transient and I think it's a bug generated by one of the recent program updates. Maybe that's what's going on here? Dunno.
Well developed image that covers all the tonalities. Nicely composed with shapes and lines both vertical and horizontal allowing us to read it in either direction. I wish for a bit more room at the top so I could see more of the cloud coming out of that first stack, but it's a workable fill-the-frame composition as it is. Nice work.
The installation itself looks interesting, but it's made more so by the addition of the spectators who've become part of the scene. The set up makes them appear to be observers on the beach with the display images. This kind of immersive display is becoming quite popular. Monochrome is a nice choice for this.
You are right. I had assumed that the industries had closed down. After a further look I think the stack is smoking. If this is the case, it changes the interpretation of the image and I agree that more room is needed at the top. Maybe that isn't smoke?
That's a glorious building. I love art deco architecture and this is a wonderful example. I like the way you've framed it with the deep V shapes on the sides of the tower. The colors are muted but very pleasing, and the high contrast shows off the details nicely.
I fully understand your fascination. I was the same way with my dam birds. It took me a year for the obsession to subside, and still today if I find an active day beneath the dam, I am mesmerized and come home with 100 images.
I like the detail you got in his eyes on this one, and the rainbow effect of the sun on those cellophane wings.
When you can make an interesting image of a light switch on a plain wall, you've got The Eye. You certainly have it.
The odd effects of glow on the top edge are interesting, the contrasts, the tonal range, the detail all help make this non interesting object become interesting. The most intriguing aspect to me is the silhouette of the old man with the big chin emerging from the box.
I'd be tempted to crop from the right to get rid of a bit of the weight on that side.
I love the composition and framing. He's singing his little heart out so boldly that I feel like I can hear him. The colors are rich and strong. He may not be as detailed as we all tend to like (maybe a heavy crop?) , but he's a lovely catch full of energy.
However you got it, it's a keeper. The layers - some translucent and some reflected - create an artwork fully of mysteries and puzzles presented in great complementary warm/cool colors. The wrought iron lends a feel of woven fabric to this image. And the pair touching hands has enough detail to spark our imagination but not so much that the story is defined for us. A very effective image.