Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2009/06/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 9:29 AM -0400 6/3/09, David Rodgers wrote: >Henning, > >Great photograph that has a special quality. What makes it for me, I >think, is a slight angularity which makes it dynamic. It almost seems >like the guy wearing black is moving. He's tilted about the same as the >pole in the upper right. Those two elements at the same angle complement >each other. They guy in black's perceived motion contrasts with the >passively sitting woman. The distance in the upper part of the photo >makes the lower part seem closer and more intimate. I'm drawn in more >than if the upper part had been cropped out. The mind can only imagine >what's the two -- I assume they're together -- are talking about, if >indeed they're even talking. There are lots of elements of contrast -- >near and far, one person wearing black and the other white, one person >standing and in motion, the other passive and sitting. Throw in some >Gestalt and I even think one person is talking and one person is >listening. All those elements working together are what make it a >special image. > >I was completely drawn in until I finally got distracted because I >looked at the trash can in the lower left and tried to determine your >level of sharpening; and was at the same time wowed by the corner >resolution of a '60s era Summicron, even with grainy ole' Tri-X. ;-) > >Dave R > Thanks, Dave. It's one of my favourite photos over the years. I've made many prints of it, and it's been published and won some prizes. I keep being drawn back to it. I was in a park across the river from the castle, going to a lookout. I saw these two; very engrossed in conversation and oblivious to everything else. Clearly an intense discussion. I took just this one photo. I left the trashcan in to provide termination to the line. Scanned in on a Nikon 5000; it enhances the grain in Tri-X/D-76 somewhat so I didn't apply any sharpening at all except what LR applied on export when 'screen - normal' is selected. -- * Henning J. Wulff /|\ Wulff Photography & Design /###\ mailto:henningw at archiphoto.com |[ ]| http://www.archiphoto.com