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Learning
Photo Evaluation
Photo Critique
Night Scape don't hold back....
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<blockquote data-quote="Eyelight" data-source="post: 337243" data-attributes="member: 24753"><p>This will be a bit of an echo of previous comments with a couple added thoughts.</p><p></p><p>The sky was probably more vivid to the eye than what appeared making the whole scene a a wow image to capture. Without the vivid sky, the silo being the most prominent object becomes kind of the subject and then the eye wanders around the image.</p><p></p><p>Post processing may be able to bring the sky up to the intensity that you saw. The key would be raising it to the level it overwhelms the silo even if the silo is in the center. The foreground would have been hardly noticeable by the eye absorbing the vivid sky, so darkening it might be more accurate (in a way). Then the wow of entire scene is the subject and the wow that you saw becomes the wow we see in the photo.</p><p></p><p>Cropping to me would depend on what can be done to bring the wow back.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Eyelight, post: 337243, member: 24753"] This will be a bit of an echo of previous comments with a couple added thoughts. The sky was probably more vivid to the eye than what appeared making the whole scene a a wow image to capture. Without the vivid sky, the silo being the most prominent object becomes kind of the subject and then the eye wanders around the image. Post processing may be able to bring the sky up to the intensity that you saw. The key would be raising it to the level it overwhelms the silo even if the silo is in the center. The foreground would have been hardly noticeable by the eye absorbing the vivid sky, so darkening it might be more accurate (in a way). Then the wow of entire scene is the subject and the wow that you saw becomes the wow we see in the photo. Cropping to me would depend on what can be done to bring the wow back. [/QUOTE]
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Night Scape don't hold back....
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