http://farm7.static.flickr.com/6075/...be94bef0_z.jpg
Ferris Wheel by The Peacemonger, on Flickr
Ante Bellum (post: 1497983) wrote:I would say I enjoy it, but I'm still at the "kid with an expensive camera" stage. I'll have to downsize some of my photos before I post any here.
Makachop^^128 (post: 1498018) wrote:I love photography >.< its my big thing
heres some on my DA http://makachop128.deviantart.com/ Great picture!
Cognitive Gear (post: 1498143) wrote:Oh, believe me, in a lot of ways that is exactly where I am. I hardly understand the rules of composition, I just sort of shoot what I think might look good. I really only get 1 out of 10 shots that I think are decent.
TopazRaven (post: 1498325) wrote:I enjoy photograpthy as well, but I'm really bad at it. xD I did take a class for it in high school, but I sucked then to. It didn't help I wasn't trying very hard either though. I have one of those normal little digital cameras. I'm hoping I might be able to take a class again some day and actually put some effort into it.
Warrior4Christ (post: 1501768) wrote:A very useful Q&A site for photography (part of the stack exchange series of sites that cover many things - programming, cooking, Christianity, finance, parenting, homebrew, etc):
http://photo.stackexchange.com/
Roy Mustang (post: 1499225) wrote:As long as you know me, I have been one. It was the best thing that I did as taking digital photography as a major in college.
I'm waiting for tomorrow as Nikon plans to release their new camera.
firestorm (post: 1499675) wrote:Cog you have a really good eye for the rules of compostion. Simple background. The spokes of the farris wheel grab your eye and leads it to the center. Great job!
TopazRaven (post: 1498325) wrote:I enjoy photograpthy as well, but I'm really bad at it. xD I did take a class for it in high school, but I sucked then to. It didn't help I wasn't trying very hard either though. I have one of those normal little digital cameras. I'm hoping I might be able to take a class again some day and actually put some effort into it.
Glad to see you here, I was hoping that you might drop in! As always, your photos give me inspiration to push my own photography forward. Your work really is just fantastic.
Would anyone be interested in short term contests or assignments, with the winner picking the theme of the next one? It could be a great way to get us all active, to get some feedback, and to give those flikr accounts something to do!
firestorm wrote:2.Why don't we create a flickrgroup for the pics? so that when people vote they can see all the pics at once and they can't tell which is which. You can put their name descriptions as numbers and people can vote number 1, or number 2, etc., etc.,
Roy Mustang (post: 1504681) wrote:I think that is a good idea. The only question is, how many here have a flickr account? Where they are free to get one, I think there is what a total of three or four of us that have one?
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Col. Roy Mustang[/color][/font]
Warrior4Christ (post: 1509170) wrote:I'm still keen.
So for a topic, could it start off as just a colour, like blue? Or a subject like "a plant"? Or "sunset"?
firestorm (post: 1504083) wrote:I have a couple of questions:
1. Can we use photoshop on our pics or will this contest be strictly whatever comes out of the camera? I know I use it on my photos when the lightings not what it should be or it's too dull or blurry.
2.Why don't we create a flickrgroup for the pics? so that when people vote they can see all the pics at once and they can't tell which is which. You can put their name descriptions as numbers and people can vote number 1, or number 2, etc., etc..
Cognitive Gear (post: 1509514) wrote:
In addition, I think that you can also use photographic techniques as topics. It can get people to try new things that they may not have before!
Cognitive Gear (post: 1509514) wrote: 1) Personally I would like to just leave it unrestricted until it is proven to be a problem. This is a photography assignment/contest, not a photoshop assignment/contest, so hopefully people will restrict themselves and be honest about what kinds of edits they performed. (I think that people are generally more impressed with non-photoshopped pictures than they are with photoshopped.)
Cognitive Gear (post: 1509514) wrote: (2) This is a good idea.
Cognitive Gear (post: 1509514) wrote:I suppose that leaves us with two decisions to make: What will the first assignment's topic be, and what kind of schedule do we want to have?
Cognitive Gear wrote:Personally I would like to just leave it unrestricted until it is proven to be a problem. This is a photography assignment/contest, not a photoshop assignment/contest, so hopefully people will restrict themselves and be honest about what kinds of edits they performed. (I think that people are generally more impressed with non-photoshopped pictures than they are with photoshopped.)
Roy Mustang (post: 1510081) wrote:I hope that no one thinks that I'm trying to start something here. Where I agree with this as a photography assignment/contest and I maybe reading this wrong on what you said. But since I finish college and had to use photoshop here and there in the photography major. I hope that you don't shy away from using photoshop from time to time. I use to be a person that didn't like to use photoshop to do any editing until the teacher made us use it it. About the only thing that I would use photoshop was, if I needed to crop a picture as if something that was still too far away from the lens. But then I got to the point that I was using it to change color pictures to B&W, which is far better then letting your camera to B&W and letting it do it.
Where Firestorm and me agree as the most editing that I do is the same thing that he does. Got to love the content aware fill that is in Photoshop Elements, when I found a pole that I don't want in a picture and there is not freaking way to get around it to take the picture.
I think two programs that photographers need is, Photoshop Lightroom (photoshop for photographers) and Photoshop Elements. Lightroom is something good to have, if you use RAW format. Which is something that I plan start using by the end of the year.
The next thing for me to learn and will take time is HDR photography.
Roy Mustang (post: 1510081) wrote: The next thing for me to learn and will take time is HDR photography.
Roy Mustang (post: 1510081) wrote: I hope that you don't shy away from using photoshop from time to time.
Cognitive Gear (post: 1510098) wrote:Oh, certainly. Photoshop is a tool. It's like the development room for film photography. Very important. I just tend to think that people enjoy seeing a picture of a house floating down a river more when it's a picture of a real event than when it's a creation of Photoshop. As such, if someone were to submit such a picture, I think it would be best if they were upfront about how that photo came to be.
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