Cibolo the Cat is thinking deeply or maybe just not!
Pete'sPrints Goldmember 1,497 posts Likes: 8 Joined Nov 2007 Location: Schertz Texas More info | Aug 05, 2008 22:41 | #1 |
sparker1 Cream of the Crop 29,368 posts Likes: 295 Joined Nov 2004 Location: Sierra Vista, AZ More info | Aug 06, 2008 09:46 | #2 Cute kitten, a lot like ours. Stan (See my gallery at http://www.pbase.com/sparker1
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Pete'sPrints THREAD STARTER Goldmember 1,497 posts Likes: 8 Joined Nov 2007 Location: Schertz Texas More info | Aug 06, 2008 22:42 | #3 sparker1 wrote in post #6057082 Cute kitten, a lot like ours. Thanks for the look and comment. She is fun and reminds one to laugh! Peter S Vives
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Normcar21 Goldmember 1,143 posts Joined Nov 2004 Location: Canada More info | Aug 06, 2008 22:46 | #4 Great capture of a moment. I wonder how it would look if you balanced out the one cut off ear with the other cut off as well? I think this shot would really highlight this great emotion if the other ear was cropped as well. Even without, love the emotion in the animal! The reason I suggest it is because Bateman, the artist, claims that "negative" space (background) is as important as "positive space" (subject). His rhino painting was almost not published because his publishers disagreed with his concept of the importance of negative space in a picture. I find that cutting the other ear off in this shot creates some really interesting background shapes. I love the shot and hope you don't mind the input. Cheers! Mark II and III; 17-40L; 24-70L; 50/1.8; 85/1.2L; 70-200/2.8L IS; 200/1.8L; 100-400L IS; Sigma 50-500; 1.4x, 2x extenders.
LOG IN TO REPLY |
Pete'sPrints THREAD STARTER Goldmember 1,497 posts Likes: 8 Joined Nov 2007 Location: Schertz Texas More info | Aug 06, 2008 23:01 | #5 Normcar21 wrote in post #6061327 Great capture of a moment. I wonder how it would look if you balanced out the one cut off ear with the other cut off as well? I think this shot would really highlight this great emotion if the other ear was cropped as well. Even without, love the emotion in the animal! The reason I suggest it is because Bateman, the artist, claims that "negative" space (background) is as important as "positive space" (subject). His rhino painting was almost not published because his publishers disagreed with his concept of the importance of negative space in a picture. I find that cutting the other ear off in this shot creates some really interesting background shapes. I love the shot and hope you don't mind the input. Cheers! I thank you for the comment, I will work on it and post the rsult soon. I have not heard of this before, but it does make sense. Again I thank you for your view and comments on the image. When she got that look I was lucky enough to have the camera in hand. Thanks again. Pete Peter S Vives
LOG IN TO REPLY |
![]() | x 1600 |
| y 1600 |
| Log in Not a member yet?
Register to forums
Registered members may log in to forums and access all the features: full search, image upload, follow forums, own gear list and ratings, likes, more forums, private messaging, thread follow, notifications, own gallery, all settings, view hosted photos, own reviews, see more and do more... and all is free. Don't be a stranger - register now and start posting!
|
| ||
| Latest registered member is Mihai Bucur 1145 guests, 170 members online Simultaneous users record so far is 15,144, that happened on Nov 22, 2018 | |||