I did something almost superhuman today. I resisted both the urge to post pictures of trees and my natural inclination towards oversaturation. I hope you're impressed
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for some reason, the statues leave me a little cold. among other things, there seems to be a resolution problem?
i do like very much the buiding facade; the inclusion of the traffic sign as a "hot" focal point is very clever. i like that one a lot.
i'm reminded of the movie "all at sea," when alec guiness, in his naval lieutenant's uniform stepped off the curb in front of a london bus. the bus driver yelled at him: "wot's the matter, nelson? lose the other eye?"
Thanks for the kind words about the first photo. I spent a fair bit of time on that one, so it's nice to see some appreciation. :-)
As for the second photo, well, judging from the near lack of responses, the statues leave a lot of people cold. I can see it's not everybody's cup of tea (at the end of the day, statues are just... statues), but I don't think that's because of a resolution problem. What makes you think it has a resolution problem? The image looks fine on my screen -- a bit unsharp perhaps, but not pixellated. So what exactly are you referring to when you say it seems to have a resolution problem?
I have no doubt I will one day be hit by a bus myself. I'm frightfully careless in traffic, even when I'm not trying to take pictures. Which is one reason why the idea of taking driving lessons somewhat scares me...
"The image looks fine on my screen -- a bit unsharp perhaps..."
that's it, it just seems not quite focused or something. i thought perhaps i was just seeing a d.of f. effect, the figure on the right seeming to be moreso than the one on the left, but in looking again, they both just seem to be the tiniest bit fuzzy, or as you say "a bit unsharp." you mentioned a tripod, so i suppose this is a low light shot, wide open, slow shutter speed? that often makes for a bit of "unsharp." [and yes, not pixilated.] this is not such a huge thing as to warrant as much concern as we've already given it; i just mentioned it in passing that it seemed slightly unfocused. i have lots of those...inside european cathedrals, holding my breath, leaning tightly against a pillar, letting the shutter stay open for 3 seconds at f.2.8...and voila! i have a photo of a rose window, "a bit unsharp."
hey! everybody can drive, but it's easier to start when you're about thirteen, practicing on the tractor and working up to the car. i'm sure you'll do fine.
Yes, low light, diaphragm wide open, slow shutter speed, the works. And yep, I definitely focussed on the statue on the left, so it's quite possible that there's a bit of a depth-of-field problem with the statue on the right. And finally, there's the fact that I shot the image on slide film, which often seems a bit less sharp to me than negative film. I probably should have done more sharpening in Photoshop, but when I tried that, I didn't really like the result. Go figure
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h'mmmm...attention deficit disorder at high speed...now there's something to think about. all we have to add now is a cell phone and you're an accident looking for some place to happen. well, please be careful. maybe you should drive only in the american west, so you can cover a few hundred miles without meeting anyone. or australia for that matter. but, since they drive backwards or at least "leftwards" that may not help
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i do like very much the buiding facade; the inclusion of the traffic sign as a "hot" focal point is very clever. i like that one a lot.
i'm reminded of the movie "all at sea," when alec guiness, in his naval lieutenant's uniform stepped off the curb in front of a london bus. the bus driver yelled at him: "wot's the matter, nelson? lose the other eye?"
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As for the second photo, well, judging from the near lack of responses, the statues leave a lot of people cold. I can see it's not everybody's cup of tea (at the end of the day, statues are just... statues), but I don't think that's because of a resolution problem. What makes you think it has a resolution problem? The image looks fine on my screen -- a bit unsharp perhaps, but not pixellated. So what exactly are you referring to when you say it seems to have a resolution problem?
I have no doubt I will one day be hit by a bus myself. I'm frightfully careless in traffic, even when I'm not trying to take pictures. Which is one reason why the idea of taking driving lessons somewhat scares me...
Reply
that's it, it just seems not quite focused or something. i thought perhaps i was just seeing a d.of f. effect, the figure on the right seeming to be moreso than the one on the left, but in looking again, they both just seem to be the tiniest bit fuzzy, or as you say "a bit unsharp." you mentioned a tripod, so i suppose this is a low light shot, wide open, slow shutter speed? that often makes for a bit of "unsharp." [and yes, not pixilated.] this is not such a huge thing as to warrant as much concern as we've already given it; i just mentioned it in passing that it seemed slightly unfocused. i have lots of those...inside european cathedrals, holding my breath, leaning tightly against a pillar, letting the shutter stay open for 3 seconds at f.2.8...and voila! i have a photo of a rose window, "a bit unsharp."
hey! everybody can drive, but it's easier to start when you're about thirteen, practicing on the tractor and working up to the car. i'm sure you'll do fine.
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