Challenge - Nov. 6 - 8 - Pick Your Best Shots
Great shot. He is making sure you read that sign and understand he is on protected land.
William wrote:
appreciate all your comments, you need to post)))))
more work, I've view little of you ideas (post/um))))
and double the trouble (fun) we exchange with ideas
you friend,
Bill
I have some I'm still working on the concepts are there I just need to finish my thoughts..lol (Must be Old Age)
Thank you for you comments. I think you are right that there wasn't much point to do more with the picture. What I didn't realize until I saw the photo on my monitor was the vibrance and the balance of the colors. Look at the moss on the tree and the tile on the top of the wall. Plus the man had his head tilted down so all that you see is his straw hat. Looks like it was posed but it was not.
Hope two is ok.
Favorite night scene
Favorite Fisheye exposure
I shot this picture of San Diego Sept. 08..... It was used on a pamphlet. Down by the harbor...
dougbev3 wrote:
I shot this picture of San Diego Sept. 08..... It was used on a pamphlet. Down by the harbor...
Hi dougbev. Welcome to the UHH. If i may, I have a couple of suggestions for this pic. Crop the building on the left with the crane out of the picture, and then straighten the buildings. I think you will wind up with a better picture, IMHO.
Maybe you'd like to use the Photoshop measure tool and the arbitrary angle rotate canvas command to get the far shoreline level across the image. I'm admittedly too fanatical about level horizons; the image is wonderful as it is.
dougbev3 wrote:
I shot this picture of San Diego Sept. 08..... It was used on a pamphlet. Down by the harbor...
Wonderful shot Doug , wow published that's awesome.
Early Morning
When you ride the trains, you are up at all hours... This was by Springfield, Co
From The Jefferson Monument
My most exciting photos were often dangerous. I was standing on girders 750 feet (75 stories) above Baltimore.MD, photographing iron-workers constructing a huge triple-TV antenna for the Washington D.C. area. How I reached 90 years old is a miracle. None of us had safety belts. This was an industrial advertising assignment in 1956, but to the best of my knowledge it was never published.
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