View Full Version : Bullseye


Tuna
01-30-2006, 04:12 PM
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v382/redboys/Bullseye.jpg

gahspidy
01-30-2006, 04:17 PM
Very good, Tuna. . .but why so small?
btw, did you get this shot just so you could use that title. . .:)

dbutler
01-30-2006, 04:25 PM
LOL. It took me a while to figure out what I was looking at! Very creative title, but I agree with Gary. Would love to see it bigger. He's scary little fella isn't he?

Tuna
01-30-2006, 04:39 PM
Very good, Tuna. . .but why so small?
btw, did you get this shot just so you could use that title. . .:)

Thanks for your replies, guys.

Gary, after development of the film, I was unhappy with the full comp of this shot (which was a full head-torso...). Then I saw the opportunity to use the title (as you so sharply realized) - but having cropped in to a very small percentage of the image, I was afraid enlarging and stretching the grain even more would cause the abstract nature of this "beast" to get too unrecognizable.

Tuna

Chunk
01-31-2006, 06:14 AM
Thanks for your replies, guys.

Gary, after development of the film, I was unhappy with the full comp of this shot (which was a full head-torso...). Then I saw the opportunity to use the title (as you so sharply realized) - but having cropped in to a very small percentage of the image, I was afraid enlarging and stretching the grain even more would cause the abstract nature of this "beast" to get too unrecognizable.

Tuna...so go back and get a reshoot with a wide angle lens and the subject filling the frame. :D

I was wondering what I would see when I opened this, imagining a Target store sign or maybe some interesting subject dead center in the frame. I like what I found and think a more abstract enlargment might be satisfying too, even though it's looser than the normal Tuna shot.

srobb
01-31-2006, 08:30 AM
Nice image as usual, tuna. I understand about the cropping and worry about the grain. You could always go back and do a shot that was zoomed in on the eye, though.