A great image has impact. The maker has something to say and all that goes into the image supports it and enhances it. Composition, lighting, posing, editing. Ancil said it is good if you get 10 great images a year. I have won and judged professional competitions in CA before moving to FL where I continue to judge. But I cut others more slack than I cut myself. To create the perfect image takes skill and sometimes
a bit of luck. To make consistently good images, not so hard. If folks don't take the time to learn what helps make a good image, they will be like that blind squirrel occasionally finding an acorn. I have a shoot tomorrow, I HAVE to produce a killer image. And I have every confidence I will.
Mr, you know, here's what I want to know? On these forums almost everybody is a pro, at least all those that never post a photograph are. It seems that the qualifications to be a great photographer today, according to some, is to have started in the Pleistocene shooting film manually, like that means anything. Seems it's because it "slowed down the process"! Why don't you just post that great photo you're gonna create and let us be the judge of whether it's great or not?
I mean, the last time I looked this is a photography forum but with few exceptions, everyone just talks but never posts anything.
I remember a particular Pulitzer Prize winning photograph from quite a few years back...., it was a guy that jumped/fell out of a window and the photographer got the shot while the guy was maybe 1/2 way down. Do you think the photographer had something to say? My guess is the photographer had ZERO control over the subject, the composition, the lighting etc, etc, but he won a Pulitzer Prize! Some shots are well planned, others like many sports shots are just happenstance.
Sure, in creating a cover for Vogue Magazine EVERYTHING is controlled. But there great/good photographs like sports, nature or street that can only be planned to a certain degree and the rest is dependent of factors not entirely in ones control.
Everybody wants to put photography into a box but it's not a one box fits all! Yes photography absolutely has rules, and I'm not talking about the 1/3's, I'm talking about all the other rules.
Anyway, just post that pic. I'm sure by now you've got it all PP'd!!!
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