• Members 1277 posts
    April 7, 2025, 10:09 a.m.

    I'll have to make an effort to visit the Loser mountain again sometime soon this year and see what they've done to this lovely area.
    They claim that it is better and even more enviromentally friendly now, with less cars driving up. I get the feeling they are trying to say it's modern but not intrusive, preserving and opening up the natural beauty.
    Well, perhaps, but we'll see! and I'll post what I see after that visit

  • Members 1958 posts
    April 7, 2025, 8:50 p.m.

    Thanks Chris. It was one of those scenes that I knew from before I got my camera out that I wanted it to be in monochrome, and that I wanted some blank space in it. I took some closer ups but the angel was not a pretty sculpture, it almost looked home-made, so I reverted to my first instinct.

    I am always honored if anyone takes the time to work on one of my photos and show me a new way to see it. I like what you did with the light. I probably won't crop it though, since the isolation of this place and its lonely monuments were things I wanted to emphasize. This long running thread has taught me there are multiple stories hiding in almost every photo if we dig deep enough. Thanks!

    Thanks Mike, there were a bunch of stories and mysteries in this place, which is very different from most of our old cemeteries. You explained one that grabbed my attention, the intrusion of light between the sheltering trees. The angel, as I said in an earlier reply, was not conducive to close examination. She seemed to have been created by someone just learning, or emulating something they'd seen, interesting but not the usual Victorian cemetery angel. Another story, definitely.

    You describe my intent very well. I took some closer, then realized I wanted exactly what you've described. I don't always get to think so purposely about object placement in the frame, but these stones were very still and waited quietly for me to consider all possibilities and even think about the black and white conversion while I was there. Very different from chasing birds or boys.

  • Members 688 posts
    April 8, 2025, 7:54 p.m.

    There is a good contrast between the women in their ornate, colourful clothing and bright umbrellas, with the rather drab coloured and surprisingly square shrine.
    I also like how Buddha stares out through the gap in the shrine, and then the aha moment when closer inspection reveals his wild staring eyes are really just discolouration on his eye-lids, and that he is really looking downwards in a peaceful and benevolent way.

  • Members 870 posts
    April 8, 2025, 7:55 p.m.

    The crop is an accident. Somehow it happened in the process of copying the image from the site, pasting it into Photoshop, copying it from there and pasting back into the site.

    Rich

  • Members 688 posts
    April 8, 2025, 8:01 p.m.

    The story behind this photo is wonderful and quite unthinkable in Europe, but even without that information the photo strikes a chord. It is visually quite simple, with few colours and only three objects, but it conveys sensations of peace, adventure, danger even, longing for travel, solitude, curiosity and ….
    You really should offer it for sale, as any one of those triggers is likely to cause a wallet to be pulled.

  • Members 688 posts
    April 8, 2025, 8:06 p.m.

    The lines and highlighted objects appearing from the shadows create an image, which provides information but also invites the viewer to imagine what else is still unseen. That is something I always enjoy.

  • Members 688 posts
    April 8, 2025, 8:10 p.m.

    What a great landscape and two beautiful photos. In both we are looking through an opening and being teased by the sights beyond. Again the images invite us to imagine what is not visible.

  • Members 1277 posts
    April 8, 2025, 8:26 p.m.

    Thanks Pete and to all the others that commented on these images.
    I didn't get much of a chance to participate much this week, which is a shame, considereing that there were a load of good images posted :-)

  • Members 688 posts
    April 8, 2025, 8:50 p.m.

    The scene is perfectly suited to its purpose of remembrance. It is quiet, slightly sombre and with a peaceful beauty of its own. The trees form the ideal background, with their tall trunks reaching heavenwards and the intricate branches and leaves covering the sky in a delicate lacework.

    I could have fun playing with alternate versions, even though it is unnecessary as the original version is fine.

    For what it’s worth, here are two others. (Simply created by zooming on my iPad and taking screenshots, as I am spending the night in Berlin before taking the train to Warsaw tomorrow morning, so no more elaborate PP at the moment!)

    In this version I tried to emphasise the mysticism, since the gravestones remind me of prehistoric standing stones.
    IMG_3361.png

    …and in this one the emphasis is on the feeling of solitude and sorrow.
    IMG_3362.png

    IMG_3362.png

    PNG, 6.3 MB, uploaded by PeteS on April 8, 2025.

    IMG_3361.png

    PNG, 5.7 MB, uploaded by PeteS on April 8, 2025.

  • Members 688 posts
    April 8, 2025, 9:01 p.m.

    This one reminds me of Fireplace’s second shot this week, and triggers the same positive responses. Although the settings could hardly be more different, with yours in an urban setting and his in the Alps, both allow a glimpse through a hole in the subject in the foreground and fires the imagination.
    I like all the lines and rectangles, which you use to present us with beauty in an unexpected place.

  • Members 688 posts
    April 8, 2025, 9:08 p.m.

    Thanks for the comments made on this photo. They have been very useful.
    I seem to be alone in liking this, which I kind of suspected, and prompted me to ask the question in the first place. I will try reworking it, using different crops.
    Roel, the interior is definitely worth a photo session too, and I may post some more interior photos at some point.