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#1
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[SI] Steeples comments
On 2/12/2013 12:02 AM, Robert Coe wrote:
Best responses to a mandate in quite a while. The SI is clearly alive and well. I'll try to be brief, as my alarm will go off at 4:19 AM (11 mins earlier than usual). Agreed. Peter Newman Atlanta Can't make up my mind. Colors are nice, but the picture is so busy my eyes won't focus. On balance, I think it's OK. Sorry about my late response. Your eyes not focusing are the fault of the image, not your eyes. It was a night shot, hand held, as I didn't want to carry a tripod on the plane. I like the composition and will eventually do something with it. Peter Newman Maine Interesting, albeit busy. I'd prefer to see the entire flags, and for it to be less murky overall. There was still a morning haze that I tried to depict something beyond a post card shot. I thought leaving a portion of the flags in would help. You are right, it is not as strong an image as I would have liked. As always, I appreciate comments positive or negative. -- PeterN |
#2
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[SI] Steeples comments
On Fri, 01 Mar 2013 12:05:06 -0500, Tony Cooper
wrote: : On Fri, 01 Mar 2013 11:42:43 -0500, PeterN : wrote: : : On 2/12/2013 12:02 AM, Robert Coe wrote: : Best responses to a mandate in quite a while. The SI is clearly alive and : well. I'll try to be brief, as my alarm will go off at 4:19 AM (11 mins : earlier than usual). : : : Agreed. : : : Peter Newman Atlanta : Can't make up my mind. Colors are nice, but the picture is so busy my eyes : won't focus. On balance, I think it's OK. : : Sorry about my late response. : : Your eyes not focusing are the fault of the image, not your eyes. It was : a night shot, hand held, as I didn't want to carry a tripod on the : plane. I like the composition and will eventually do something with it. : : : Peter Newman Maine : Interesting, albeit busy. I'd prefer to see the entire flags, and for it to be : less murky overall. : : : There was still a morning haze that I tried to depict something beyond a : post card shot. I thought leaving a portion of the flags in would help. : You are right, it is not as strong an image as I would have liked. : : As always, I appreciate comments positive or negative. : : : And the rest of us would appreciate comments on our submissions. There : are a couple of people who regularly post comments on the images, but : too few do so. It's very much worth the effort, for those who can find the time. (Sometimes I can and sometimes not; I'll try to be more consistent in the future.) Commenting on others' work helps the commenter learn to see his own work more objectively and is apt to make him/her a better photographer. I recently joined CIPNE (Commercial/Industrial Photographers of New England), an organization whose members have been struggling to recover from the economic effects of the Great Republican Depression of the Lesser Bush Administration. Their principal claim to relevance is their quarterly lectures by renowned professional photographers. I've been to two so far and found them extremely entertaining and informative. I asked the president about their annual photo competition, since their Web site shows no winners since 2011. He told me they'd had to cancel last year's event for lack of participation and asked for ideas on how to jump start it this year. I referred him to the Shoot-In as an example of a model that seems to work over an extended period. (Theirs is a little different, though: they actually have cash prizes. I told him I'm definitely in if they have it this year!) Bob |
#3
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[SI] Steeples comments
On 2/03/2013 4:05 AM, Tony Cooper wrote:
On Fri, 01 Mar 2013 11:42:43 -0500, PeterN wrote: On 2/12/2013 12:02 AM, Robert Coe wrote: Best responses to a mandate in quite a while. The SI is clearly alive and well. I'll try to be brief, as my alarm will go off at 4:19 AM (11 mins earlier than usual). Agreed. Peter Newman Atlanta Can't make up my mind. Colors are nice, but the picture is so busy my eyes won't focus. On balance, I think it's OK. Sorry about my late response. Your eyes not focusing are the fault of the image, not your eyes. It was a night shot, hand held, as I didn't want to carry a tripod on the plane. I like the composition and will eventually do something with it. Peter Newman Maine Interesting, albeit busy. I'd prefer to see the entire flags, and for it to be less murky overall. There was still a morning haze that I tried to depict something beyond a post card shot. I thought leaving a portion of the flags in would help. You are right, it is not as strong an image as I would have liked. As always, I appreciate comments positive or negative. And the rest of us would appreciate comments on our submissions. There are a couple of people who regularly post comments on the images, but too few do so. How do you do that as its better to understand the background to the image. |
#4
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[SI] Steeples comments
On 2013-03-01 15:08:58 -0800, Rob said:
On 2/03/2013 4:05 AM, Tony Cooper wrote: On Fri, 01 Mar 2013 11:42:43 -0500, PeterN wrote: On 2/12/2013 12:02 AM, Robert Coe wrote: Best responses to a mandate in quite a while. The SI is clearly alive and well. I'll try to be brief, as my alarm will go off at 4:19 AM (11 mins earlier than usual). Agreed. Peter Newman Atlanta Can't make up my mind. Colors are nice, but the picture is so busy my eyes won't focus. On balance, I think it's OK. Sorry about my late response. Your eyes not focusing are the fault of the image, not your eyes. It was a night shot, hand held, as I didn't want to carry a tripod on the plane. I like the composition and will eventually do something with it. Peter Newman Maine Interesting, albeit busy. I'd prefer to see the entire flags, and for it to be less murky overall. There was still a morning haze that I tried to depict something beyond a post card shot. I thought leaving a portion of the flags in would help. You are right, it is not as strong an image as I would have liked. As always, I appreciate comments positive or negative. And the rest of us would appreciate comments on our submissions. There are a couple of people who regularly post comments on the images, but too few do so. How do you do that as its better to understand the background to the image. You do that by putting your thoughts regarding any specific image into words. Constructive criticism is not simple or easy. A fair amount of thought has to be put into it to be able to say more than "I like that shot", or "I don't like that one".Your comments can be based on initial impression, impact as an art work good or bad, technical excellence, or technical failure. An understanding of the background to the capture of the image is irrelevant. A technically good image is going to be good regardless of any of our individual tastes. A good, or even great landscape might not be Tony's particularly favorite type of image, given that he favors candids and street photography, but he is able to see and address what he recognizes as good, or bad in an image, and explain what he likes, or doesn't like it. Each shot has to be able to stand or fall on its own, regardless of circumstances of the capture. A bad out, of focus shot is just that, and there is nothing wrong with telling the photographer that is what you take away from the the shot, regardless of what the shooter feels should be taken into consideration regarding the background circumstances of the shoot leading to that bad, out of focus image. ....and it is always nice to be able to let the photographer know what it is you particularly like about a shot and why. -- Regards, Savageduck |
#5
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[SI] Steeples comments
On 2/03/2013 11:04 AM, Savageduck wrote:
On 2013-03-01 15:08:58 -0800, Rob said: On 2/03/2013 4:05 AM, Tony Cooper wrote: On Fri, 01 Mar 2013 11:42:43 -0500, PeterN wrote: On 2/12/2013 12:02 AM, Robert Coe wrote: Best responses to a mandate in quite a while. The SI is clearly alive and well. I'll try to be brief, as my alarm will go off at 4:19 AM (11 mins earlier than usual). Agreed. Peter Newman Atlanta Can't make up my mind. Colors are nice, but the picture is so busy my eyes won't focus. On balance, I think it's OK. Sorry about my late response. Your eyes not focusing are the fault of the image, not your eyes. It was a night shot, hand held, as I didn't want to carry a tripod on the plane. I like the composition and will eventually do something with it. Peter Newman Maine Interesting, albeit busy. I'd prefer to see the entire flags, and for it to be less murky overall. There was still a morning haze that I tried to depict something beyond a post card shot. I thought leaving a portion of the flags in would help. You are right, it is not as strong an image as I would have liked. As always, I appreciate comments positive or negative. And the rest of us would appreciate comments on our submissions. There are a couple of people who regularly post comments on the images, but too few do so. How do you do that as its better to understand the background to the image. You do that by putting your thoughts regarding any specific image into words. Constructive criticism is not simple or easy. A fair amount of thought has to be put into it to be able to say more than "I like that shot", or "I don't like that one".Your comments can be based on initial impression, impact as an art work good or bad, technical excellence, or technical failure. An understanding of the background to the capture of the image is irrelevant. A technically good image is going to be good regardless of any of our individual tastes. A good, or even great landscape might not be Tony's particularly favorite type of image, given that he favors candids and street photography, but he is able to see and address what he recognizes as good, or bad in an image, and explain what he likes, or doesn't like it. Each shot has to be able to stand or fall on its own, regardless of circumstances of the capture. A bad out, of focus shot is just that, and there is nothing wrong with telling the photographer that is what you take away from the the shot, regardless of what the shooter feels should be taken into consideration regarding the background circumstances of the shoot leading to that bad, out of focus image. ...and it is always nice to be able to let the photographer know what it is you particularly like about a shot and why. No not the feedback bit, understand that, I want to send some details (not the exif data) with my submitted image. is this information placed within the body of the email? |
#6
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[SI] Steeples comments
On 2013-03-02 03:37:16 -0800, Rob said:
On 2/03/2013 11:04 AM, Savageduck wrote: On 2013-03-01 15:08:58 -0800, Rob said: On 2/03/2013 4:05 AM, Tony Cooper wrote: On Fri, 01 Mar 2013 11:42:43 -0500, PeterN wrote: On 2/12/2013 12:02 AM, Robert Coe wrote: Best responses to a mandate in quite a while. The SI is clearly alive and well. I'll try to be brief, as my alarm will go off at 4:19 AM (11 mins earlier than usual). Agreed. Peter Newman Atlanta Can't make up my mind. Colors are nice, but the picture is so busy my eyes won't focus. On balance, I think it's OK. Sorry about my late response. Your eyes not focusing are the fault of the image, not your eyes. It was a night shot, hand held, as I didn't want to carry a tripod on the plane. I like the composition and will eventually do something with it. Peter Newman Maine Interesting, albeit busy. I'd prefer to see the entire flags, and for it to be less murky overall. There was still a morning haze that I tried to depict something beyond a post card shot. I thought leaving a portion of the flags in would help. You are right, it is not as strong an image as I would have liked. As always, I appreciate comments positive or negative. And the rest of us would appreciate comments on our submissions. There are a couple of people who regularly post comments on the images, but too few do so. How do you do that as its better to understand the background to the image. You do that by putting your thoughts regarding any specific image into words. Constructive criticism is not simple or easy. A fair amount of thought has to be put into it to be able to say more than "I like that shot", or "I don't like that one".Your comments can be based on initial impression, impact as an art work good or bad, technical excellence, or technical failure. An understanding of the background to the capture of the image is irrelevant. A technically good image is going to be good regardless of any of our individual tastes. A good, or even great landscape might not be Tony's particularly favorite type of image, given that he favors candids and street photography, but he is able to see and address what he recognizes as good, or bad in an image, and explain what he likes, or doesn't like it. Each shot has to be able to stand or fall on its own, regardless of circumstances of the capture. A bad out, of focus shot is just that, and there is nothing wrong with telling the photographer that is what you take away from the the shot, regardless of what the shooter feels should be taken into consideration regarding the background circumstances of the shoot leading to that bad, out of focus image. ...and it is always nice to be able to let the photographer know what it is you particularly like about a shot and why. No not the feedback bit, understand that, I want to send some details (not the exif data) with my submitted image. is this information placed within the body of the email? OK! Understood. Just advise Bowser that there are notes/comments included with something like [+Comments] in the subject line, and add those comments to the submission email. -- Regards, Savageduck |
#7
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[SI] Steeples comments
On 3/2/2013 6:37 AM, Rob wrote:
On 2/03/2013 11:04 AM, Savageduck wrote: On 2013-03-01 15:08:58 -0800, Rob said: On 2/03/2013 4:05 AM, Tony Cooper wrote: On Fri, 01 Mar 2013 11:42:43 -0500, PeterN wrote: On 2/12/2013 12:02 AM, Robert Coe wrote: Best responses to a mandate in quite a while. The SI is clearly alive and well. I'll try to be brief, as my alarm will go off at 4:19 AM (11 mins earlier than usual). Agreed. Peter Newman Atlanta Can't make up my mind. Colors are nice, but the picture is so busy my eyes won't focus. On balance, I think it's OK. Sorry about my late response. Your eyes not focusing are the fault of the image, not your eyes. It was a night shot, hand held, as I didn't want to carry a tripod on the plane. I like the composition and will eventually do something with it. Peter Newman Maine Interesting, albeit busy. I'd prefer to see the entire flags, and for it to be less murky overall. There was still a morning haze that I tried to depict something beyond a post card shot. I thought leaving a portion of the flags in would help. You are right, it is not as strong an image as I would have liked. As always, I appreciate comments positive or negative. And the rest of us would appreciate comments on our submissions. There are a couple of people who regularly post comments on the images, but too few do so. How do you do that as its better to understand the background to the image. You do that by putting your thoughts regarding any specific image into words. Constructive criticism is not simple or easy. A fair amount of thought has to be put into it to be able to say more than "I like that shot", or "I don't like that one".Your comments can be based on initial impression, impact as an art work good or bad, technical excellence, or technical failure. An understanding of the background to the capture of the image is irrelevant. A technically good image is going to be good regardless of any of our individual tastes. A good, or even great landscape might not be Tony's particularly favorite type of image, given that he favors candids and street photography, but he is able to see and address what he recognizes as good, or bad in an image, and explain what he likes, or doesn't like it. Each shot has to be able to stand or fall on its own, regardless of circumstances of the capture. A bad out, of focus shot is just that, and there is nothing wrong with telling the photographer that is what you take away from the the shot, regardless of what the shooter feels should be taken into consideration regarding the background circumstances of the shoot leading to that bad, out of focus image. ...and it is always nice to be able to let the photographer know what it is you particularly like about a shot and why. No not the feedback bit, understand that, I want to send some details (not the exif data) with my submitted image. is this information placed within the body of the email? It depends. Most of the time Bowser has been pretty good about that. But keep in mind, if you do a lot of that, we may have to increase his pay. -- PeterN |
#8
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[SI] Steeples comments
On 3/03/2013 2:13 AM, Savageduck wrote:
No not the feedback bit, understand that, I want to send some details (not the exif data) with my submitted image. is this information placed within the body of the email? OK! Understood. Just advise Bowser that there are notes/comments included with something like [+Comments] in the subject line, and add those comments to the submission email. -- Regards, Savageduck That's what I didn't understand. Thanks |
#9
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Steeples comments
On Mar 2, 11:40*am, PeterN wrote:
On 3/2/2013 6:37 AM, Rob wrote: On 2/03/2013 11:04 AM, Savageduck wrote: On 2013-03-01 15:08:58 -0800, Rob said: On 2/03/2013 4:05 AM, Tony Cooper wrote: On Fri, 01 Mar 2013 11:42:43 -0500, PeterN wrote: On 2/12/2013 12:02 AM, Robert Coe wrote: Best responses to a mandate in quite a while. The SI is clearly alive and well. I'll try to be brief, as my alarm will go off at 4:19 AM (11 mins earlier than usual). Agreed. Peter Newman Atlanta Can't make up my mind. Colors are nice, but the picture is so busy my eyes won't focus. On balance, I think it's OK. Sorry about my late response. Your eyes not focusing are the fault of the image, not your eyes. It was * a night shot, hand held, as I didn't want to carry a tripod on the plane. I like the composition and will eventually do something with it. Peter Newman Maine Interesting, albeit busy. I'd prefer to see the entire flags, and for it to be less murky overall. There was still a morning haze that I tried to depict something beyond a post card shot. I thought leaving a portion of the flags in would help. You are right, it is not as strong an image as I would have liked. As always, I appreciate comments positive or negative. And the rest of us would appreciate comments on our submissions. There are a couple of people who regularly post comments on the images, but too few do so. How do you do that as its better to understand the background to the image. You do that by putting your thoughts regarding any specific image into words. Constructive criticism is not simple or easy. A fair amount of thought has to be put into it to be able to say more than "I like that shot", or "I don't like that one".Your comments can be based on initial impression, impact as an art work good or bad, technical excellence, or technical failure. An understanding of the background to the capture of the image is irrelevant. A technically good image is going to be good regardless of any of our individual tastes. A good, or even great landscape might not be Tony's particularly favorite type of image, given that he favors candids and street photography, but he is able to see and address what he recognizes as good, or bad in an image, and explain what he likes, or doesn't like it. Each shot has to be able to stand or fall on its own, regardless of circumstances of the capture. A bad out, of focus shot is just that, and there is nothing wrong with telling the photographer that is what you take away from the the shot, regardless of what the shooter feels should be taken into consideration regarding the background circumstances of the shoot leading to that bad, out of focus image. ...and it is always nice to be able to let the photographer know what it is you particularly like about a shot and why. No not the feedback bit, understand that, I want to send some details (not the exif data) with my submitted image.. is this information placed within the body of the email? It depends. Most of the time Bowser has been pretty good about that. But keep in mind, if you do a lot of that, we may have to increase his pay. -- PeterN I vote that we double his salary! |
#10
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Steeples comments
On 8/03/2013 1:37 AM, otter wrote:
On Mar 2, 11:40 am, PeterN wrote: On 3/2/2013 6:37 AM, Rob wrote: On 2/03/2013 11:04 AM, Savageduck wrote: On 2013-03-01 15:08:58 -0800, Rob said: On 2/03/2013 4:05 AM, Tony Cooper wrote: On Fri, 01 Mar 2013 11:42:43 -0500, PeterN wrote: On 2/12/2013 12:02 AM, Robert Coe wrote: Best responses to a mandate in quite a while. The SI is clearly alive and well. I'll try to be brief, as my alarm will go off at 4:19 AM (11 mins earlier than usual). Agreed. Peter Newman Atlanta Can't make up my mind. Colors are nice, but the picture is so busy my eyes won't focus. On balance, I think it's OK. Sorry about my late response. Your eyes not focusing are the fault of the image, not your eyes. It was a night shot, hand held, as I didn't want to carry a tripod on the plane. I like the composition and will eventually do something with it. Peter Newman Maine Interesting, albeit busy. I'd prefer to see the entire flags, and for it to be less murky overall. There was still a morning haze that I tried to depict something beyond a post card shot. I thought leaving a portion of the flags in would help. You are right, it is not as strong an image as I would have liked. As always, I appreciate comments positive or negative. And the rest of us would appreciate comments on our submissions. There are a couple of people who regularly post comments on the images, but too few do so. How do you do that as its better to understand the background to the image. You do that by putting your thoughts regarding any specific image into words. Constructive criticism is not simple or easy. A fair amount of thought has to be put into it to be able to say more than "I like that shot", or "I don't like that one".Your comments can be based on initial impression, impact as an art work good or bad, technical excellence, or technical failure. An understanding of the background to the capture of the image is irrelevant. A technically good image is going to be good regardless of any of our individual tastes. A good, or even great landscape might not be Tony's particularly favorite type of image, given that he favors candids and street photography, but he is able to see and address what he recognizes as good, or bad in an image, and explain what he likes, or doesn't like it. Each shot has to be able to stand or fall on its own, regardless of circumstances of the capture. A bad out, of focus shot is just that, and there is nothing wrong with telling the photographer that is what you take away from the the shot, regardless of what the shooter feels should be taken into consideration regarding the background circumstances of the shoot leading to that bad, out of focus image. ...and it is always nice to be able to let the photographer know what it is you particularly like about a shot and why. No not the feedback bit, understand that, I want to send some details (not the exif data) with my submitted image. is this information placed within the body of the email? It depends. Most of the time Bowser has been pretty good about that. But keep in mind, if you do a lot of that, we may have to increase his pay. -- PeterN I vote that we double his salary! He is already on a fairly big yearly retainer. |
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