Here they are:
Tony_Stark Shellhead 4,287 posts Likes: 350 Joined May 2010 Location: Toronto, Canada More info | Nov 18, 2010 21:16 | #1 |
PurplePuppy Senior Member 284 posts Joined Mar 2010 Location: Vancouver More info | Nov 18, 2010 21:36 | #2 Here are my ratings (out of 400) and humble opinions: Canon EOS Rebel XS | Tamron 17-50mm f/2.8 VC | Tair 11a (135mm f/2.8, M42, manual) | Cheapo aluminum tripod from dealextreme.
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jetcode Cream of the Crop 6,235 posts Likes: 1 Joined Jul 2009 Location: West Marin More info | Nov 18, 2010 22:23 | #3 PermanentlyThe portrait is the best of the lot and I wish his hat was a tad higher on his forehead for better light. For #1 think about balance. What is the most important element and how is it framed? Is there adequate support from the surrounding elements?
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vk2gwk Cream of the Crop 13,360 posts Gallery: 332 photos Likes: 1836 Joined Jun 2009 Location: One Mile Beach, NSW 2316, Australia More info | Nov 18, 2010 22:50 | #4 #1: The "main leaf" is too small in the surrounding area. A tighter crop might make it more interesting - even with only one leaf. My name is Henk. and I believe "It is all in the eye of the beholder....."
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Tony_Stark THREAD STARTER Shellhead 4,287 posts Likes: 350 Joined May 2010 Location: Toronto, Canada More info | Nov 18, 2010 23:00 | #5 |
whydub Member 94 posts Likes: 1 Joined Sep 2010 More info | Nov 18, 2010 23:07 | #6 1) I like #1 the most and I think it would look better with a tighter crop around the leaves. Both #1 and #2 would look more interesting as a macro shot.
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Tony_Stark THREAD STARTER Shellhead 4,287 posts Likes: 350 Joined May 2010 Location: Toronto, Canada More info | Nov 19, 2010 15:13 | #7 |
swetsastonic Senior Member 440 posts Joined Sep 2010 More info | Nov 20, 2010 09:23 | #8 I like #1 a lot.
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jetcode Cream of the Crop 6,235 posts Likes: 1 Joined Jul 2009 Location: West Marin More info | Nov 20, 2010 10:20 | #9 PermanentlyI think you may have been programmed by your instructor that every composition has to fit the frame or else. It's a lie. Cropping is a powerful tool and when you shoot primes a necessary tool at times when you can't get the exact composition to frame relationship.
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corkneyfonz Goldmember 2,477 posts Likes: 5 Joined Oct 2009 Location: United Kingdom More info | Nov 20, 2010 12:01 | #10 |
Tony_Stark THREAD STARTER Shellhead 4,287 posts Likes: 350 Joined May 2010 Location: Toronto, Canada More info | Nov 20, 2010 16:30 | #11 jetcode wrote in post #11317031 I think you may have been programmed by your instructor that every composition has to fit the frame or else. It's a lie. Cropping is a powerful tool and when you shoot primes a necessary tool at times when you can't get the exact composition to frame relationship. Ive taught myself everything Nikon D810 | 24-70/2.8G | 58/1.4G
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