J wrote:rainforest
The mist effect is very strong, but the photo itself is hurt by the resultant flatness. The lighting is so even and so much of the image is submerged in fog that there's nothing to grab the eye except the extreme foreground, which is empty and looks off-kilter. It makes for a good backdrop, but really wants a subject and more thoughtful composition to make a good
picture.
Death wrote:J wrote:Mmmm...is the building supposed to be yellowish-green or are you having issues with your colour settings again? Generally, one does not see that colour of sunlight and it looks unnatural to me.
It's meant to be golden-brownish, this was during the sunset and the stone building was practically honey coloured from the sunlight. It's meant to be this way, thanks for paying attention though!
I didn't notice any green cast to the light, but the stone seems to be slightly olive-colored which might account for it. That said, other than noting the importance of shooting at times other than noon +/- 3 hours because the light is much better then, I didn't find anything of interest in these three photos. Unless it's at thumbnail resolution, you might as well post the bell-tower shot as well.
Second cloud shot is overexposed at the top and the clouds lack the necessary visual impact. I think it would look better if the clouds were lit from below - i.e. shot at sunrise or sunset - because an overcast sky with the sun above it is backlit, which means that the cloud details are low-contrast or invisible. First cloud shot is boring and careless. Cloudscapes are easier to do as part of a landscape than as isolated sky, but quite frankly I don't think you have what it takes to make them successfully, in terms of tools (CPL for color or orange/red filter for B&W are necessities, I would say) and in terms of ability to judge lighting and composition.
Bird photo is not terrible but you've got three bad corners of four and the flock is just too far away to help you out. Shooting into the sun hasn't done you a single favor yet; why do you keep on with it?
Death wrote:Since when do you have a macro lense though?
What's the deal with this? You gave me the same line about an ultrawide earlier in the thread, as if macro lenses and ultrawides are some sort of expensive rarity that only the photographic
crème de la crème have the privilege to be allowed to use. You seem to have a weird relationship with gear, as if you've got ego tied up in what you have rather than what you can do with it. This makes little sense, since photographers with less and simpler equipment than yours have made photos that put yours to shame, and I am sure that they were too busy honing their skill with
what they had to make remarks about anyone who seemed to have better gear than they did. Your posting history is littered with that kind of thing: the remarks to Bounty and me; you buy a new prime and almost immediately complain that it's "cheap" without really evaluating its capabilities and whether or not it suits your style of photography; the constant "curse my lack of/crappy [gear or feature]!" complaints (now including CPLs - just
buy one. You can get a 52mm CPL for US$20 or less through Amazon, for crying out loud. Shit doesn't always have to be so pro.) Here's my advice:
stop caring. If you are interested in
photography, spend your time cultivating skills, themes, and styles instead of fiddling with gear. When you are thinking about buying a new tool - because that's what a camera or any other piece of gear is; just a tool - see that it fits in with your style of photography and gives you a capability that you need but don't already have. You take a lot of photos of clouds, and big skies. Well, a CPL will help you with that much more than a 50mm prime ever will. Concentrate on your art, or be chained to dillettantery and mediocrity forever.
Death wrote:And who needs manual controls
Oh for Pete's sake, here we go again. "My camera is better 'cause all you suckas only work manual." News flash, Sparky: the only thing that matters is
proficiency with whatever tools you use. Are auto-metering and auto exposure handy? Sure - that's why they were introduced in the early 1970s to begin with ans are so commonplace now. But auto-exposure is a luxury, not a necessity - and anyone who thinks otherwise has to answer to the body of great photographs produced before it ever existed. Besides which, the ability to expose manually - in other words, to do more than point and shoot - gives one access to
every camera ever manufactured, which in invaluable to the camera enthusiast or merely anyone who wants more choice than the crop of auto-capable cameras produced in the last forty years. Want to shoot large-format? Better learn to expose manually. Want to shoot medium-format without bankrupting yourself? Pick up an older camera, but be forewarned that it will probably require you to expose manually. Want to use an iconic camera that
literally beats down 35mm and digital units? See my sig for details - and brush up on that manual exposure.