Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/05/18
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]In a message dated 5/18/00 2:26:12 PM, howard.390@osu.edu writes: >Bob, liked your stuff. I think your being a bit too hard on yourself (except for the scan quality -- man, those are BAAAAAD scans! ;) Yep, they are. I threw that site together without actually learning how to use Photoshop or PageMill. I realize it's pretty crude. The whole thing was totally seat of the pants and, quite frankly, long forgotten. I have learned at least a little bit about Photoshop since then but haven't had the time to mess with the site. It sounds like Rural Missouri is finally going to build a site so maybe soon I'll have something better to point people to. Actually the only reason I gave the URL was because somebody asked to see some of my photos and that was the only thing I had to show them. >The shot of the man in the hat on the train, drinking and reading a paper >is great. The others are a little cliché, but I guess that's what your customers are looking for. I'll offer the man in the hat as an alternative to so-called "street photography." I suspect that the street photographer would have snuck the guy's photo. I talked to him, told him what I was doing and asked him if he minded if I shot a few pictures. He agreed, I sat back and watched. Eventually we shot the breeze a bit and I shot some more photos. He was a good conversation, he was a nice guy -- though with a pretty screwed up life it sounded like. In all, I got a lot more out of the encounter than I would have if I had stolen his picture. Plus, I believe the photo is just as honest and real as it would have been if it had been a slanted horizon, shot-from-the-hip "street" photo. >The panorama of the sheepdog is another nice one: is it a panorama, or >has it been compressed for the web-site? The aspect ratio looks odd.> Again just lack of knowing what I was doing with Page Mill. I really should fix that, shouldn't I? >And that final image: The is one RELAXED dog! Personally, I think I'd adjust the colours a bit on that: The red is too distracting and the man's complexion seems a bit ruddish/yellowish. You're right. Like I said, I know it's a pitiful effort. I really should just pull the whole thing down but I haven't found time for that either. I'm too busy making new photos, writing stories, wasting time on this computer and carrying on my "real" life to mess with the site . . . Bob (guilty of a bad webpage) McEowen