Lines in the SandCapture Date: Mar 29, 2015 07:19 AM•Views: 31No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
Michael Mariant Apr 30, 2015 10:12 AM
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Very well done. Good capture of a often passed scene. |
It Spoke to MeCapture Date: Mar 27, 2015 04:15 PM•Views: 111No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
Michael Mariant Apr 30, 2015 10:17 AM
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Great detail shot. Excellent composition and placement of elements within the frame. And perfect use of selective focus to keep the eye on the texture of that one spoke. |
Grave with FlowerCapture Date: Mar 27, 2015 04:53 PM•Views: 97No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
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Dune BushesCapture Date: Mar 27, 2015 07:29 AM•Views: 35No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
Michael Mariant Apr 30, 2015 10:18 AM
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Try cropping just a bit off the top of the image, to get rid of that triangle section on the top-right. Then the focus moves to just this wall of sand and cluster of bushes. Good job! |
Devil's Golf CourseCapture Date: Mar 26, 2015 06:15 PM•Views: 33No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
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Cloudy DunesCapture Date: Mar 29, 2015 07:12 AM•Views: 35No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
Michael Mariant Apr 30, 2015 10:18 AM
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Winner winner, chicken dinner!!! Perfect execution of everything you have learned. Send this off to Color Services to get a print to hang on your wall! |
Cactus FlowersCapture Date: Mar 28, 2015 03:32 PM•Views: 31No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
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BadwaterCapture Date: Mar 26, 2015 02:42 PM•Views: 33No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
Michael Mariant Apr 30, 2015 10:21 AM
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Excellent use of the layering principle. If you had worked a bit on the selective focus to that less of the background was in focus, the bush would jump out even more. Not sure why, but your ISO was at 800, which is why your f-stop (controlling your depth of field) was at f/36, meaning that everything was going to be in focus. If you dropped your ISO down to 200, you would be letting in less light. If you then changed your shutter speed to a faster number, also letting in less light, then you would have to open up your aperture (smaller number) to let in more light, which would also give you less depth of field. Make sense? |
BadlandsCapture Date: Mar 28, 2015 07:41 AM•Views: 122No comments yet. All fields are required, fill in the form. Comment successfully added. Comment
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