out of the file. A soft landscapeModerators: Greg B, Nnnnsic, Geoff, Glen, gstark, Moderators
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Re: out of the file. A soft landscapeAnother three steps to the right methinks. To get greater separation between the tree and the pole.
In the words of a poet I studied at school. "Geometry aping a tree". Though he was talking about a chimney stack. Greg
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Re: out of the file. A soft landscapeThanks for the comments Greg. I think any further seperation of the the tree and the pole would open a hole in the center of the image that allowed the eye to shoot straight through. In my opinion the tree is an eye stopper and that's exactly what it's purpose is. I could have lined it up with the third fence post but then the above still occurs. Your comment has made me look more closely at the composition but I think I got it right. Be interesting to see the opinions of others.
Regards
Matt. K
Re: out of the file. A soft landscapeI am thinking of a square crop cutting the
foreground and part of the sky. It would make the natural lines in the picture more prominent and the composition more intersting, I think.
Post about the post in post?The thing that strikes me is the three fence posts and the lamp post nearly aligned with the left one.
What I wonder is how it would have worked had you got in a little closer to get past the light out-of-focus foreground grass, perhaps used a slightly wider lens in consequence, carefully aligned the bottom of the lamppost with the top of the leftmost fence post and just left a small gap between them. Though they would clearly be separate, that might produce interesting psychological ambiguity. Maybe that's what you were trying to do anyway. You could always try that in post-processing (actually, for this image, it might be the one time I was willing to say "in post"). It might be a little tricky to get the shades of the grass to match up but probably not too hard.
Re: out of the file. A soft landscapeI would have preferred the fence post not to be aligned with the power post.....
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Re: out of the file. A soft landscapewell , since there seems to be a wish list here I might as well put my item on it. I think the power pole sticks out like dog b@lls and detracts from the image, clone it out
However, the scene as it is does convey a sense of 'man' meeting the land and the end result, ie desolate farming land with a dead tree, in that sense, with a caption from the author it could be a very powerful image, as it is with no explanation it is mere guess work from the viewer to try and decipher what was the original intention, minimalist abstract image? environmental statement? something else? just a scene that grabbed matts attention? gerry's photography journey
No amount of processing will fix bad composition - trust me i have tried.
Re: out of the file. A soft landscape
... or maybe some dogs balls in the sky to balance it out, perhaps adjusted to look like a solar eclipse?
Re: out of the file. A soft landscape
solar eclipse...now thats going to far...dog b@lls on teh other hand... gerry's photography journey
No amount of processing will fix bad composition - trust me i have tried.
Re: out of the file. A soft landscapeI have to say I'm not a fan of the telegraph pole lining up with the fence post either - at first I thought it was a bad attempt at cloning to make a gap or something - and in reality I would rather the image without the power pole and lines at all - other than that I like the nice soft landscape.
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Re: out of the file. A soft landscapecall me strange but i like the pole lining up with the fence. it creates a really cool optical illusion.
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Re: out of the file. A soft landscapeI like it because of the soft pastels, like a coloured pencil drawing.
The important patterns to me are the recurring green and yellow shades, contrasted with the soft blue sky. I'm drawn to this image because so many photographs that we see these days are maxed out with saturated colours and strong contrast. This is such a nice change. TFF (Trevor)
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Re: out of the file. A soft landscapeI love the muted colours here, Matt.
I'm undecided as to whether you should have aligned the lh fencepost with the telegraph pole, and also as to whether a square crop might be a better vehicle for this, bearing in mind that you've placed the tree neat and in the middle. Changing the crop will alter that relative placement. g.
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Re: out of the file. A soft landscapeMy only suggestion would be a very large print. I am not concerned about the placement of the pole with the fence post as, to me they are minor players in the overall picture. The lines leading to the convergent point at right is enough. The colours are awesome and the overall "mood" create a wonderfully different landscape.
I hasten to add that the lining up of the pole with the left hand post and the small pole(?) with the right hand post adds to the image, given the relationship with the lines leading right and the relative size of the two 'poles'. Last edited by Reschsmooth on Sun Jul 17, 2011 6:39 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Regards, Patrick
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Re: out of the file. A soft landscapeGary
'Neat and in the middle'...........the distillation of a thousand volumes on the art of composition. Regards
Matt. K
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