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Question: When I posted my image in this Photo Critique forum, I chose to upload it to my Gallery as well. Seems simple. So why did the image appear three times in my Gallery? (I manually removed the extra copies in my Gallery... now the thumbnail image is missing.)
Question: When I posted my image in this Photo Critique forum, I chose to upload it to my Gallery as well. Seems simple. So why did the image appear three times in my Gallery? (I manually removed the extra copies in my Gallery... now the thumbnail image is missing.)
Because you uplaoded to three different catagories. I think?
I am like Barney Fife, I have a gun but Andy makes me keep the bullet in my pocket..
Fantastic image. The color and illumination is wonderful. good framing. I agree the original version looks sharper. Could be that after leveling the re edit you sharpened less or so. Either way it's great.
I always work in Photoshop. This time, to straighten the horizon, I did a quick edit in iPhoto and the result came out a little soft. Strange. Has anyone else experienced this in iPhoto? Are there other Mac users here? Thanks for the feedback on my photo. Good eyes, great minds in this forum.
I always work in Photoshop. This time, to straighten the horizon, I did a quick edit in iPhoto and the result came out a little soft. Strange. Has anyone else experienced this in iPhoto? Are there other Mac users here? Thanks for the feedback on my photo. Good eyes, great minds in this forum.
If you edited the resized jpeg that you had originally posted then it could have suffered from more compression after you saved it again. If you edited your original high res file( tif, RAW?) and then followed your normal proceedure for saving to the web perhaps you did not apply the same sharpening amounts.
I'm guilty on the first count: re-editing a previously edited image, therefore re-compressing a previously compressed file. And that's what you you get... a softer, blurred image! I'll go back to the original high-res Photoshop file. Thanks for your wisdom Gahspidy.
This is an awesome photo - as everyone else has said. It's one of those that calls me to go back and have the pleasure of viewing it again....and again. Thanks for sharing your good work! Post some more.
It looks fantastic as well on the thumbnail at top of the page. What i also find surreal about this is that the rocks surrounding the house would be very large in size, like boulders. This actually looks like a model house set on some gravel with an ocean scene behind it. Whatever, it looks fantastic and surreal.
If it was a house roof I'd expect to see guttering and downpipes on it, that fact that it seems to just drip off in to the rocks makes me question the scale of this photo (which is another reason why I like it, same as you Gary).
I think this is a gravel covered flat roof (large gravel) and the stepped part we see is possibly a skylight, with multicoloured windows. I'd say about 30 foot* square, perhaps larger.
* Assumes 10 windows a side, with 12" windows and 18" between.
Thanks for your comments everyone.
My title "rooftop" is actually with reference to the flat surface covered with stones (see a different angle/composition attached). What appears to be a ridged roof is in fact the top of a large skylight for a dining room below. During the day, the colored-glass windows flood the restaurant with amazing rainbows of natural light. I'm afraid I don't have exact roof measurements nor did I count the number of small windows but I think Smart Wombat is pretty close with his calculations (except windows are bigger than 12"). For reference, the average diameter of the stones is approximately six to eight inches. What makes this shot surreal is the lighting. The yellowish light on the left is coming from another set of windows from an adjoining building. And of course the gradated sky was generously provided by the setting sun on the Riviera Maya - Mexico. (Note: At that moment, everyone else was enjoying the culinary delights in the restaurant below while I was crawling/fumbling around in the dark with my camera. All of you reading this forum know exactly what I'm talking about, right?)
Freedom - Been meaning to see that this is a really neat shot of a neat place. Funny reading your last post's description, I was going to guess that it was either somewhere up in the Santa Barbara area or in Mexico, the latter because Mexican artists seem to gravitate towards the simple primary and secondary colors (I don't know why I also thought of SB...).
Very nice composition too. You appear to have found a really nice, pleasing angle of a fairly complicated architecture.
Gb
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Feel free to edit and repost my photos as part of your critique.
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