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<blockquote data-quote="Browncoat" data-source="post: 206770" data-attributes="member: 1061"><p>Any time I offer feedback on someone else's work, I try to offer advice that would allow you to take your photography to the next level. Any monkey can point a camera somewhere and push a button. In most cases, that next level can be achieved without specific gear or throwing a bunch of money at it.</p><p></p><p>I do see some instinct here. "Shoot into a corner" is one of the hallmarks of good real estate photography, and compositionally, this is a keeper. But this shot is also a poster child for what makes real estate photography difficult: balancing the lighting. And what you have here is a classic example of what separates beginners from that next level.</p><p></p><p></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Browncoat, post: 206770, member: 1061"] Any time I offer feedback on someone else's work, I try to offer advice that would allow you to take your photography to the next level. Any monkey can point a camera somewhere and push a button. In most cases, that next level can be achieved without specific gear or throwing a bunch of money at it. I do see some instinct here. "Shoot into a corner" is one of the hallmarks of good real estate photography, and compositionally, this is a keeper. But this shot is also a poster child for what makes real estate photography difficult: balancing the lighting. And what you have here is a classic example of what separates beginners from that next level. [/QUOTE]
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