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lbcyalater
12th of October 2009 (Mon), 17:15
but you dont understand why so many people seem to like it?

jptsr1
12th of October 2009 (Mon), 17:25
but you dont understand why so many people seem to like it?

lots of times. even more often i have people comment that they love shots that are technically horrid. to each their own. i just thank them for the compliment and keep trying to get better.

chopperdave
12th of October 2009 (Mon), 17:28
haha! yeah! That used to happen more than it does now though, maybe i just like more of my own work.

chopperdave
12th of October 2009 (Mon), 17:31
lots of times. even more often i have people comment that they love shots that are technically horrid. to each their own. i just thank them for the compliment and keep trying to get better.

Well that's like I always say, someone will like a crappy snapshot of a pretty girl more than they like a wonderful photo of a homely girl.

lbcyalater
12th of October 2009 (Mon), 17:42
lots of times. even more often i have people comment that they love shots that are technically horrid. to each their own. i just thank them for the compliment and keep trying to get better.
yeah I do the same thing.
haha! yeah! That used to happen more than it does now though, maybe i just like more of my own work.
God, I wish I liked more of my work...I guess I am just to critical dowadays.
Well that's like I always say, someone will like a crappy snapshot of a pretty girl more than they like a wonderful photo of a homely girl.
So very sad but true :(

DStanic
12th of October 2009 (Mon), 17:52
I think as photographers we are more critical on technical aspects, and when we accomplish something that we think is amazing (something difficult to do) a "regular" person might not care at all. "Regular" people usually just care about the subject in the picture, how well it's composed and exposed only adds to how good it is. Same goes for painting, or music.. something that is very easy to do might be more appealing then something that was difficult to create.

lbcyalater
12th of October 2009 (Mon), 17:54
oh and for an example, this pic below is my #1 viewed pic on my Zenfolio...granted no one may actually LIKE this picture but there is something that always seems to make people click on it to see it bigger.
http://lbcyalater.zenfolio.com/img/v0/p341209275-4.jpg

Cosha
13th of October 2009 (Tue), 07:35
mmmmmmmm SO RED & Sooooo GREEN, must click Enlarge photo! :D

How many views?

TerriStorer
13th of October 2009 (Tue), 11:46
but you dont understand why so many people seem to like it?

A LOT. I think I'm mediocre at best, however several of my photographer friends (either F/T or P/T professional photography) say I do great work.

AxxisPhoto
13th of October 2009 (Tue), 11:54
To answer the OP: No. As my work gets better, I find myself actually trying to promote it more and more.

oh and for an example, this pic below is my #1 viewed pic on my Zenfolio...granted no one may actually LIKE this picture but there is something that always seems to make people click on it to see it bigger.
http://lbcyalater.zenfolio.com/img/v0/p341209275-4.jpg

This looks like a Pink Floyd Album cover!

gkarris
13th of October 2009 (Tue), 12:22
"Beauty's in the eye of the beholder..."

I had a really great pic people in the hobby liked, but when I showed it to my friends, they couldn't figure out why anyone would like it...

Kiwikat
13th of October 2009 (Tue), 13:30
This looks like a Pink Floyd Album cover!

I was thinking the same thing! :p

lbcyalater
13th of October 2009 (Tue), 13:35
lol doesnt that cover just have a single cow?

alphonsis
13th of October 2009 (Tue), 14:27
quite often, and it's usually a missed opportunity. In that, it would've been a sweet shot, but I messed it up for some reason. i.e. didn't frame properly, missed the exposure, etc.

So I want to love it, but I know it's technically flawed. Thankfully my friends don't necessarily notice the technical stuff and rave about it.

bjyoder
13th of October 2009 (Tue), 14:39
oh and for an example, this pic below is my #1 viewed pic on my Zenfolio...granted no one may actually LIKE this picture but there is something that always seems to make people click on it to see it bigger.
http://lbcyalater.zenfolio.com/img/v0/p341209275-4.jpg

There are lost of great design reasons that people don't think about that get them interested in the picture. There's the saturation of the foreground colors; the exposure being spot on; variety with repetition in the school house and the little caboose-looking car to the right, along with the animals; the lines in the mountain create leading lines to the brightest and most in focus subject of the picture.... It goes on.

To the O.P.'s original question. I can usually understand why someone would like a photo even though I normally don't think much of it (or, more appropriately, I like others far more). What happens to me far more often, though, is that I'll take a picture that I love and is technically a great photo, but most people just pass right over it like it was another typical shot.

The hardest-to-achieve photos generally look like anyone can take them, it seems.

golfecho
13th of October 2009 (Tue), 14:50
oh and for an example, this pic below is my #1 viewed pic on my Zenfolio...granted no one may actually LIKE this picture but there is something that always seems to make people click on it to see it bigger.


People (and police too) always catch their eye on a bright red car. If the thumbnail is too small to see what the red building is all about, that might be the attraction . . .

big_apple_ken
14th of October 2009 (Wed), 17:22
What happens to me far more often, though, is that I'll take a picture that I love and is technically a great photo, but most people just pass right over it like it was another typical shot.


I hate it when that happens. Sometimes I'll be super happy about how a photo came out but people will be way more interested in some technically 'crappier' shot I just threw in for kicks :(

Nick Pro
14th of October 2009 (Wed), 17:44
oh and for an example, this pic below is my #1 viewed pic on my Zenfolio...granted no one may actually LIKE this picture but there is something that always seems to make people click on it to see it bigger.
http://lbcyalater.zenfolio.com/img/v0/p341209275-4.jpg



I also might think it might be the 2 headed moose horse cow thing.

Snydremark
15th of October 2009 (Thu), 13:11
I'm about 50/50 for the shots I actually show my friends/family. However, when I'm messing around in PP while the g/f is sitting on the couch, she'll frequently exclaim that she really likes a particular shot that I'm looking and trying to figure out why it didn't work worth a damn.

I also have the problem mentioned of taking a shot that *I* love and having others just sort of look at it and go "meh"; That one to me is more frustrating.

The first issue helps me not be as totally hypercritical of my own work as I'm inclined to be otherwise. I sometimes get overly focused on whether a given shot is in exacting focus at 1:1 and forget that if it's viewed on a greeting card or other smaller print it's probably not even going to be noticeable to the person looking at it (unless they're a hypercritical photographer too).

birdfromboat
15th of October 2009 (Thu), 19:40
I had an instructer tell me to never delete in the field, always give a decent exposure a second chance and a second opinion if possible. She said that even seasoned pros will be surprised by what the editors pick for print use. I have always had other people tell me they like different shots than what I would pick, sometimes they are trying to be supportive but sometimes a second opinion will help me see something I got that I wasn't really trying for.

photoguy6405
16th of October 2009 (Fri), 02:20
I think as photographers we are more critical on technical aspects, and when we accomplish something that we think is amazing (something difficult to do) a "regular" person might not care at all. "Regular" people usually just care about the subject in the picture, how well it's composed and exposed only adds to how good it is.
I think this is a big part of it. We're too close to the process, plus we know the technicalities and the subtleties that were missed. An average viewer not as "into" the craft as we are doesn't, and actually has the freedom and luxury of not knowing and is thus able to just look at it and either enjoy it or not.

I had an instructer tell me to never delete in the field, always give a decent exposure a second chance and a second opinion if possible. She said that even seasoned pros will be surprised by what the editors pick for print use. I have always had other people tell me they like different shots than what I would pick, sometimes they are trying to be supportive but sometimes a second opinion will help me see something I got that I wasn't really trying for.
Yep. I can show a dozen people a dozen shots and ask each which is their favorite and get almost a dozen different answers.

kidfiji
16th of October 2009 (Fri), 02:51
everone really seems to like my 'event photos' even though they're just a bunch of pictures of people chillin.