• Members 712 posts
    Aug. 22, 2024, 8:23 p.m.

    Well, maybe it's during the day then, that it's also about subject matter and detail.

    😮

    Rich

  • Members 353 posts
    Aug. 22, 2024, 8:42 p.m.

    We could happily talk about details in a photo 😄

  • Members 4019 posts
    Aug. 22, 2024, 9:53 p.m.

    I disagree.

    For me it's subject matter first and then light and shadow.

    Light and shadow on a boring subject still makes an uninteresting image.

    When necessary I find it much easier to add interesting light and shadow to an image in post.

  • Members 353 posts
    Aug. 22, 2024, 10:17 p.m.

    No, please no minniev!
    The photo was never about bicycles, it was about interesting architecture.
    Can't you see that?
    Sometimes I despair in this forum.

  • Members 4019 posts
    Aug. 22, 2024, 10:25 p.m.

    You seem to struggle coping with the fact people are entitled to interpret images as they like.

    It is up to the photographer to make it clear what the subject is in the scene and lead viewers' eyes to it.

    The architecture is not interesting to everyone so they will try to find something else in the image to interest them.

    As I posted earlier, for me it's subject matter first then light and shadow.

  • Members 442 posts
    Aug. 23, 2024, 12:04 a.m.

    Not very nice ...

  • Members 4019 posts
    Aug. 23, 2024, 12:06 a.m.

    Yes, it seems to me there is a huge gap between Kumsal's perceived ability in his photography and reality.

  • Members 1102 posts
    Aug. 23, 2024, 12:59 a.m.

    Interesting conversation in this sub-thread...

    Has lead me to view the image a bit more closely and appreciate it. Indeed the architecture is worth noting. There is a lot of variety. Each side of the lane has it's own period style, with the walkway? above appearing different again. The walkway looks like it may have been placed there by a crane as an afterthought, and the suspended light, in an abstract way, suggests as much. Now the best part. The terminated vanishing lines of the lane create a viewport in which there appears two more architectural styles. The shade of the lane directs us through the viewport to it's sunlit scene. That, I imagine, is the intent of the capture - would be mine at least if I was presented with the scene. The bicycles: There are so many they become at least a secondary subject with their own story. The attire of the riders suggests summer in an otherwise colder latitude.

    C&C: Tone, Delivery. It's not about what Should be done, but about what Could be done. There is no Absolute correct way...

  • Members 712 posts
    Aug. 23, 2024, 5:08 a.m.

    Actually . . . No . . . It was always about bicycles and never about architecture! Weird, huh?

    The problem is that someone has seen something in your image that you have completely missed because you were so "focused" on attributes that were quite uninteresting. You apparently captured an interesting composition without having any awareness of it.

    The "architecture" is quite mundane, somewhat chaotic and confusing. But the arrangement of the bicycles and the riders is very interesting, almost humorous and visually pleasing.

    I don't think you can take credit for the accomplishment. After all, you're denying it. You missed it. But your camera didn't. Minnie noticed it right away. You complain that you despair in this forum. But you're despairing about the wrong thing. Despair that you don't take the time to see what's right in front of your eyes. Or that you can't simply accept that someone else can see what you didn't.

    On the other hand, it's just a snapshot. It's not a big deal.

    Rich

  • Members 4019 posts
    Aug. 23, 2024, 6:02 a.m.

    You were lucky they arrived soon after, as you say, because the cyclists and bicycles along the walls "make" the photo.

    If your intention was to highlight the architecture then imo it failed big time because why would you put the subject of the photo in shadow.

    At least put some light (with some dodging and burning) on the top half of the left wall in post to give it some character. A bit of selective lighting of the right wall helps to highlight that wall as well.

    A tight crop from just below the bikes in foreground to the bottom of that walkway/bridge/whatever it is certainly helps to highlight the cyclists in the background and the bicycles on the two walls. The cyclists and the bikes on the wall are "the story" of this scene for me. The tight crop also helps to highlight the walls a bit more but as secondary elements to the scene.

  • Aug. 23, 2024, 6:31 a.m.

    Sometimes one shot includes multiple images, don't you think so?
    Your image can be interpreted (at least) in two ways - interesting archtecture or bicycles/cyclists.
    In my opinion such multitude raises image value :)

  • Members 1416 posts
    Aug. 23, 2024, 8:38 a.m.

    Just to make me feel better. Trying to get something as good as these, I have taken countless shots of the little critters. How many shots, to the nearest 10,000, did you take to get these? I suspect the answer will not make me feel better.
    Following them is hard enough. If the entire body is in the frame I'm pleased. Once I master that I'll move on to the frozen wing detail you manage in shot after shot.
    Number two impresses me most. I don't recall seeing a dragon fly taken at that angle before. I imagine you needed to be stopped down on the tele to get the dof and the wing detail. But then you needed lots of speed to stop the movement.
    Good to hear you and the gear are OK. Lenses that can catch dragon flies to this standard have to be protected.

  • Members 1102 posts
    Aug. 23, 2024, 12:41 p.m.

    I am aware of distractions leading to accidents etc and try to keep an eye on things. Hard to keep it at 100%...

    Thx. I tried to lift shadows a fair bit but by the time I was seeing a result there was already some haloing evident. I don't have a tool that can properly select an object within the image to apply selectively.
    I often tried to take backlit shots with reflections on their wings last summer with my FZ300. It just didn't really work because I could never get a fast enough ss. On the day above it just happened that I had more opportunities from the backlit angle. I kinda wanted the light reflecting off the wings more than anything - but if someone can do it...

    Haha, I suspect the answer will not, but I will try...
    For the record, when I first started trying to capture these critters, for a week or two I had zero keepers. Until I noticed that one particular species did spend a bit of time hovering in between darting about. Only then did I start to get some. But there was still plenty of practice needed. Having moved to m43 has helped a lot.
    The other day my camera was on burst the whole shoot. Not long bursts, maybe 5 to 10 shots each press. I took ~400 [Edit 800 files Raw+Jpg] shots perhaps half birds of which none were much. There were not many other dragonfly shots that I could have included. So most went into the bit bucket. Most days with stationary subjects it is single shot and 200 for an outing is a lot. I read people say 1,000's of shots per outing - I just don't have the time / patience to go through so many...

    There was plenty of light that day that gave me a good fast ss. At the distance I was shooting I didn't need to stop down from the usual f/7.1 to get any more dof - to be honest I wasn't even thinking about it as it was the first opportunity for many months. I'll say again, I don't try and track them. I wait till I see one hovering.

    Too true.

  • Members 689 posts
    Aug. 23, 2024, 3:09 p.m.

    To keep dragonflies coming - some of mine latest

    Gibbs Gardens 240818 - 35-Edit.jpg

    Gibbs Gardens 240818 - 25-Edit-2.jpg

    Gibbs Gardens 240818 - 26-Edit.jpg

    Gibbs Gardens 240818 - 24.jpg

    Gibbs Gardens 240818 - 24.jpg

    JPG, 1.1 MB, uploaded by Sagittarius on Aug. 23, 2024.

    Gibbs Gardens 240818 - 26-Edit.jpg

    JPG, 807.5 KB, uploaded by Sagittarius on Aug. 23, 2024.

    Gibbs Gardens 240818 - 25-Edit-2.jpg

    JPG, 1.0 MB, uploaded by Sagittarius on Aug. 23, 2024.

    Gibbs Gardens 240818 - 35-Edit.jpg

    JPG, 925.5 KB, uploaded by Sagittarius on Aug. 23, 2024.

  • Members 353 posts
    Aug. 23, 2024, 10:35 p.m.

    Thanks Bryan.
    What you describe was exactly what I was trying to do.
    Bikes were just there.
    I was just waiting for people to appear in the better-lit part of the photo.
    After a while, these cyclists came.
    What caught my interest were the different layers in this photo and the architecture.
    And, the shadows were meant to lead the eye to the better-lit part of the photo.
    Apparently I failed there.

  • Members 4019 posts
    Aug. 24, 2024, 9:31 p.m.

    Imo, yes.

    A tighter crop, as described earlier would have worked much better in guiding the eyes to the better lit parts you referred to.

  • Aug. 24, 2024, 9:59 p.m.

    I understand your preference to not allow other users edit your image, but can you make an exclusion?
    In my mind I imagine much tighter crop, which actually could help to create what you wanted - lead focus to interesting architecture. Well, it also leads focus to cyclists, but this would be bonus, not deficiency.
    If interested, just say - I also can send my idea it to you privately, not to post here.

  • Members 4019 posts
    Aug. 24, 2024, 11:16 p.m.

    Another option is to describe the boundaries of a suggested crop as I did earlier.

    The pathway and the perspective effect of the two walls are then much stronger leading lines to the cyclists.

    It's up to Kumsal whether he then tries it or not.

  • Members 1591 posts
    Aug. 24, 2024, 11:42 p.m.

    I'll try to explain. For me, the architecture wasn't that engaging. I've seen fine architectural photos here that showcased interesting structures - especially from Roel, Chris, Pete, and from you. This one is not one of them, but it IS an engaging photo. The architecture in this one is a frame, a box, a square shape that contains the scene, with a multitude of leading lines taking us into the square well lit box at the end of the street. The scene is somewhat distant and frames a few bikers with more bikes in excellent light. So the shape, the lines, the box, and the lighting tell me the image is about the players on that distant stage. What are they doing? They are biking. The building behind them is too far away and too truncated by the frame/box to be thought the subject. The many bikes that line the walls inform me further: lots of bikes forming yet another pair of leading lines, taking my eye to the brightly lit stage where our distant main actors can be found. The bikes are the dominant motif.

    If the subject is the architecture, perhaps a strong crop to whichever part of it you're trying to draw attention to might help. Or, a different angle that revealed more of what you liked about the building or buildings, being cautious to avoid getting too many of the bikes/bikers in the scene to confuse viewers about your purpose. The lighting might still work against you though. A different time of day might help.

    There are often multiple images inside the frames we capture. I jokingly call my photography pixel-gathering, because I know that I, or someone I share with, may find another more interesting photo amongst the pixels. Once, some years ago, I found one of those on my SD card and almost deleted it. It was a careless snap I took through the car window in hopes of identifying a bird some distance from me. After looking again I kept it. It led to a two year project, a generous cash endowment, and multiple gallery shows. Always be open to finding treasures you didn't have in mind when you pressed the shutter button.

  • Members 1591 posts
    Aug. 25, 2024, 12:11 a.m.

    thanks Chris. In the Maritimes, like in some northern European countries, bright colors were the style in coastal villages of the early 20th century. This old fishery compound has been abandoned for years but it was a treasure trove of rugged buildings, nets, bouys, chains, ropes, and tumbledown piers. I could have stayed in the fishery the whole week. And I may pull together a few more, I likely have hundreds to pick from.

    Agree. The drizzly overcast day made the colors pop and made it lots easier to get good captures.

    Lots of fun shots in this compound set right onto the coast. It's been closed for decades but it looks like they left yesterday. There is a resident caretaker who keeps things up a bit and makes sure prowlers like me are not up to mischief.

    thanks, I agree it is better served and understood with supporting images of other buildings and objects. As a single image it has to stand entirely on detail and color, and closeups are not my strength.

    Thank you. Colors shot in overcast conditions usually work out well for me. It is somewhat abstract (about as abstract as I get, not my strong suit). There's treasure behind the door. (traps, boys, colorful ropes, rusted chains)

    Thanks Mike, the conditions available (gray drizzle) are my favorite for shooting bright colors. I had not thought of matching it up with other similar shots of different colors/shapes, that's a good option. Grand Manan is a wonderful place for photographers or artists, and it has not been thoroughly discovered. As for my roulette process, I just load up the catalog, put it in library mode with the smallest thumbnails, roll the side bar, close my eyes and click somewhere. Very unscientific.