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Single people in the field
Single people in the field
Nuno


Photograph Information Photographer's Comments
Challenge: People II (Advanced Editing IV)
Camera: Nikon D70
Location: Sesimbra, Portugal
Date: Apr 17, 2005
Aperture: f/7
ISO: 200
Shutter: 1/500
Galleries: Portraiture, Rural
Date Uploaded: Apr 17, 2005

My wife Lisa at Sesimbra castle. It was a cloudy day so the light was even and soft. Shot with Nikkor 70-300mm f4-5.6D ED, handheld at 70mm, 1/500 sec.

Statistics
Place: 234 out of 251
Avg (all users): 4.5837
Avg (commenters): 4.4000
Avg (participants): 4.4560
Avg (non-participants): 4.7167
Views since voting: 655
Views during voting: 327
Votes: 245
Comments: 12
Favorites: 0


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AuthorThread
05/01/2005 04:28:57 AM
Critique Club Comment:

Hi there,

I think I must agree with most of the commenters that your subject is not easy to find in this photo.
The main focus must be on your wife and I would have chosen a tighter crop.
Think while doing post processing about the 640 Pixels maximum, and try to use them.
Try to fill up as much of that 640 Pixels with your main subject.
The whole key in scoring here at DPC is to lure the voters into voting higher, and the way to do that is “impact”

A few rules I have learned here at DPC are:
- Make sure the voter understands in 1 second what you are trying to say.
- Make sure your subject is in focus.
- Saturate as much as you can, over saturate and then go 1 step back (that will slam the picture in their face)
- Sharpen; try various methods of sharpening until you find something that you like. Then after resizing sharpen again (read this tutorial: //www.dpchallenge.com/tutorial.php?TUTORIAL_ID=26 )
- Use the rule of thirds as much as possible, I know this is a rule that you can break, but here on DPC it’s a rule you can’t break, otherwise some people believe your photo is not good.

Off course these rules are not always right, but generally I think if you try to stick to most of these rules you will see your score get up.

I hope this helps you in any way.

Keep up the good work.

Peter

If you have any questions, comments or other things about this critique, or are bored and want to spam someone just PM me
  Photographer found comment helpful.
 Comments Made During the Challenge
04/24/2005 01:42:34 PM
She seems just OOF.
04/24/2005 08:12:28 AM
subject is too small in the frame
04/24/2005 06:48:13 AM
IMO, this needs to be cropped in a bit so the subject is easier to see. You should try to use the rule of thirds to place the subject. I'd get her head aabove the horizon by squating down further to take the photo. Also, try using a wide aperture (low f/stop) to tighten up the depth of focus so those trees in the background will be blurry & not distract the viewer.
  Photographer found comment helpful.
04/24/2005 05:28:13 AM
I like this very simple setup. To improve it I think I would have tried moving the subject down the hill to the left so that she was in the first third of the shot and sky was the only background behind her. She would have stood out more. Also this is a fairly soft shot, maybe a little bit more focus on the face would have made her pop.
  Photographer found comment helpful.
04/23/2005 11:58:11 PM
The image seems tilted and rather out of focus, would probably have been better using a higher f number..
04/22/2005 06:34:28 AM
Were she standing... this title could have been "Outstanding in her field" heehee
  Photographer found comment helpful.
04/21/2005 04:36:14 PM
Why is the saturation so low?
  Photographer found comment helpful.
04/21/2005 03:00:21 PM
This badly needed a saturation boost. Everything looks dull and flat. You probably would have gotten a point higher on average from everyone with a boost in color.
  Photographer found comment helpful.
04/19/2005 10:18:27 PM
Looks like she's in levitation. lol Nice composition.
  Photographer found comment helpful.
04/18/2005 11:28:43 AM
Why did you chose to be so far from the subject? Is the subject the field or the person in it? This shot also screams for Flash fill. With the light location and the distance from your subject this shot has a snapshot feel to it, even though I feel you were trying for a nice portrait in the field. Get in closer and reflect some light back into her face, and I think you'll be pleased with the results.
  Photographer found comment helpful.
04/17/2005 09:14:47 PM
I think a tighter crop would have been great
  Photographer found comment helpful.


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