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PERL9
Location: Phoenix, AZ, USA
| | First Critique < on 9/22/2013 7:53 AM >
| | | So, First time posting to the critique board. I shot this picture with my canon T2i, on a 15mm fisheye. I took this photo through a window of the building, because I liked the way the building exterior was in the shade, but the contents of the building were not (a wall was missing), hence the sepia effect.
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PERL9
Location: Phoenix, AZ, USA
| | Re: First Critique <Reply # 2 on 9/22/2013 7:03 PM >
| | | Posted by paulpowers it should be bigger
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I thought people might be annoyed if I dropped a full Raw image in. so my usual 1920 x 1080 will do. Isn't bigger better? (yes, phrasing)
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Aleksandar
Location: United States Gender: Male
your darkest shadow, my oldest friend; the world's become ashes, this is the end.
| | Re: First Critique <Reply # 3 on 9/22/2013 7:08 PM >
| | | Posted by PERL9 I thought people might be annoyed if I dropped a full Raw image in.
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he's being sarcastic. 1920x1080 is too big. I wouldn't go any bigger than 1024x768, and even smaller than that is fine for us to evaluate your photography.
Freedom breeds war; and Peace, slavery. So it shall be forevermore: Men who love freedom buy it with their lives, and lovers of peace with their freedom. |
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PERL9
Location: Phoenix, AZ, USA
| | Re: First Critique <Reply # 4 on 9/22/2013 8:02 PM >
| | | Posted by Aleksandar he's being sarcastic. 1920x1080 is too big. I wouldn't go any bigger than 1024x768, and even smaller than that is fine for us to evaluate your photography.
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yeah I know, and in the future, it will always be scaled for 1024X768.
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tofutiger
Location: College Station, TX Gender: Male
The pelagic argosy sights land
| | Re: First Critique <Reply # 5 on 10/26/2013 12:25 PM >
| | | There's nothing here that I find particularly interesting; in fact, it's just really boring. Can you explain why you took this photo? What interested you? What you wanted to capture?
"And it was, though more unutterable, like the crumbling away of two little heaps of finest sand, or dust, or ashes, of unequal size, but diminishing together as it were in ratio, if that means anything, and leaving behind them, each in its own stead, the blessedness of absence." |
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