Thanks to all who commented on my pictures. I appreciate it.
That stand alone formation in the bottom of the canyon is called the Turks Head. There are dozens of cliff dwelling ruins around the base and higher up. Really a cool place. Nice photo, even if I don't like B&W.
Thank you for commenting. The picture does present an abstract quality which seems inherent to the view.
I did not know misappropriation of images happened at 500px. I believed this site had theft controls in place.
I too see a deficiency in the horizontal width of 600 pixels. My landscape photographs do benefit from viewing at a larger size. My photograph here, however, contains strong graphic qualities that appeal to the eye even so.
You suggest that I offer a downloadable version of my photographs for better viewing. I may do so. Yet I note that doing so would open my photographic work to "misappropriation of images."
How do I get UHH to allow posting a larger version of my images? Typically, I save a JPEG version of my images at 1000 pixels in height for display. The horizontal length will of course vary by format ratio.
I appreciate your detailed comment.
Happy New Year!
Linda From Maine wrote:
Fascinating, nearly an abstract. I see you have an account on 500px, so I'm assuming you don't fear misappropriation as some do. The reason I mention is because UHH displays thumbnails at 600 pixels wide, really too tiny to enjoy most photos that are of distant subjects. Also, the mustard yellow pages aren't conducive to many of the grayer-toned b&w.
If you are comfortable doing so, would love to see future photos with "store original" clicked so we can download to a black screen, and larger size (1500 - 2000 pixels wide is sufficient for most of us
).
Fascinating, nearly an abstract. I see you have an... (
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Ruin on Plain, Wupatki National Monument
anotherview wrote:
I do primarily landscape photography and most of it in the U.S. national parks and other, similar preserved areas. This section will serve photographers like myself. Thanks for establishing it here.
I attach one of my favorite pictures, from Canyonlands NP: View of the Green River from an overlook, showing dramatic erosion pattern.
To call this photo “nice” is the understatement of the year.
It is stunning!
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