Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/01/06
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Re. http://www.leica-gallery.net/et/folder-3725.html Eric, I had not seen your gallery before, and almost passed by as the thumbnail pictures didn't look interesting at first. But a few nice designs made me look closer, and I enjoyed many of the photos very much. In some, I feel as well as see your world, because I am drawn into the picture by the subtle way your subject matter is presented. A few comments which might be helpful to you: Week 30 is not an interesting subject, but an impressive example of either quick reflexes or much patience - each a important skill. Week 51 is great. I can't say more. If the negative contains a sliver of image beyond the end of the gun barrel it would be nice. If not, forget it - - it doesn't matter a bit. Week 37 is fascinating. The tilt catches the eye and creates tension in the whole image. There are stories being told in each layer: the boys, the wedding, and the bustle of the city all around - maybe even a social comment regarding the boys vs. the well dressed wedding party? One thing which would help that photo very much, and the other pictures also, is a lower image contrast. On my monitor, which is well calibrated for b&w, the bride fades into the rest of the tones, so that I didn't see her at first. The plain of the ground is too light to be solid. The buildings in the background are too bright to see. On the dark extreme, the people in weeks 46 and 47 are also hard to "read." A lower contrast allows the midtones greater expression. As is, they are pulled down toward the shadows or up with the highlights. Two good examples of what I mean would be HCB or Elliot Erwitt, both of whom instruct their printers to go soft and pay attention to the middle-grays. That makes for less dramatic photos as prints, but they know it's the contents of the pictures that create the real drama, not how bold the blacks are. (Softer contrast also makes the images easier to reproduce.) It might be your exposure or development is at fault (pushed film speed?), or the way you adjust the photos in software, but refining that part of your photography would help so much to show the interesting things you see and have begun capture so well. Good luck in the new year, and please keep us aware of what you are shooting. Sincerely, Carl - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html