AndrewHux
TPF Noob!
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2009
- Messages
- 46
- Reaction score
- 20
- Location
- Illinois
- Website
- www.machtwomedia.com
- Can others edit my Photos
- Photos NOT OK to edit
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
Not bad! Just time to get rid of the awful watermark now, make it more subtle.
This is actually really interesting timing. I stopped in at a local art exhibit this morning. It was a group of 20-some paintings, each based on a different county in South Dakota. Due to the Tonal movement influence on the series (learned that reading the information, not really that big of an art-geek), they all had some beautiful, but soft color schemes to them. But apparently as a bit of an autograph, the artist would put a little bright-red tick mark somewhere in each painting. I realized it in the very first one. From then on, I couldn't look at the rest of any of the pictures until I found the red tick in each one. Wasn't trying, it was just the way my brain worked. It was DISTRACTING. And when I hit one picture in which I couldn't find that d@mned red tick, I nearly imploded.
People will look at your work. It's your choice whether you want them to see your photo or your text editing skills. And if they really want to steal the pic, they'll just remove the watermark so everyone else will look at the photo.
It's really a pretty good shot once I fought my way past the red tick mark at the bottom.
Muddy ....needs a little more contrast by opening the midtones up ...nice shot
This is actually really interesting timing. I stopped in at a local art exhibit this morning. It was a group of 20-some paintings, each based on a different county in South Dakota. Due to the Tonal movement influence on the series (learned that reading the information, not really that big of an art-geek), they all had some beautiful, but soft color schemes to them. But apparently as a bit of an autograph, the artist would put a little bright-red tick mark somewhere in each painting. I realized it in the very first one. From then on, I couldn't look at the rest of any of the pictures until I found the red tick in each one. Wasn't trying, it was just the way my brain worked. It was DISTRACTING. And when I hit one picture in which I couldn't find that d@mned red tick, I nearly imploded.
People will look at your work. It's your choice whether you want them to see your photo or your text editing skills. And if they really want to steal the pic, they'll just remove the watermark so everyone else will look at the photo.
It's really a pretty good shot once I fought my way past the red tick mark at the bottom.
This is actually really interesting timing. I stopped in at a local art exhibit this morning. It was a group of 20-some paintings, each based on a different county in South Dakota. Due to the Tonal movement influence on the series (learned that reading the information, not really that big of an art-geek), they all had some beautiful, but soft color schemes to them. But apparently as a bit of an autograph, the artist would put a little bright-red tick mark somewhere in each painting. I realized it in the very first one. From then on, I couldn't look at the rest of any of the pictures until I found the red tick in each one. Wasn't trying, it was just the way my brain worked. It was DISTRACTING. And when I hit one picture in which I couldn't find that d@mned red tick, I nearly imploded.
People will look at your work. It's your choice whether you want them to see your photo or your text editing skills. And if they really want to steal the pic, they'll just remove the watermark so everyone else will look at the photo.
It's really a pretty good shot once I fought my way past the red tick mark at the bottom.
I might start doing something like that - I like the idea of frustrating someone that much without even having to meet them!!
Can see them but they all seem to run together tonally. Try resetting the black and white points and see how well it pops your contrast up to a more pleasing tonal scale.
I think they should be this way. It is after all "low visibility" paint scheme and that implies low contrast. It looks as it should, those "grays" are very close to the real colors. Great pic in many aspects, very sharp despite the great speed (looks like a low pass at 500-600 km/h ). If not for the horizon line it would be a classic.Can see them but they all seem to run together tonally.
First off, great photo. Nice capture indeed. Midtones are fine as mentioned above too. As usual, it all comes down to personal tastes and I think this image was captured in the most effective way possible and you have great camera skills for sure. In the conversion to black and white, all I can see as an improvement would be to brighten the highlights a touch.
I am not hung up on watermarks by any means. I think they are important to include on images. Mine are applied temporarily and automatically by my hosting site and they definitely protect images from misuse and copyright. You placed it in a perfect spot, the only thing is that its red on a black and white image and colour is this first thing most people see in a black and white image and brightness and red are the first thing most people see in a colour image. The watermark would be spot it, in my opinion, if it was neutral in colour.
Fantastic image. Keep it up.
I think they should be this way. It is after all "low visibility" paint scheme and that implies low contrast. It looks as it should, those "grays" are very close to the real colors. Great pic in many aspects, very sharp despite the great speed (looks like a low pass at 500-600 km/h ). If not for the horizon line it would be a classic.Can see them but they all seem to run together tonally.
Looking at the sharp shadows below the wing it is clearly a bright sunny day, the sky does not match that, IMO it should be much brighter than this.
As a result the overall look does appear muddy.
Perhaps you adjusted the sky to "highlight" the plane?
Great shot all the same.