Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/12/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I'm more to Ted's point of view here than yours, Robert, although I understand what you're saying. After seeing the chairs I found myself disturbed by the skewed verticals. These get in the way of the composition, making it feel strange and me uncomfortable. It's not my immediate reaction, however, because I like the image a whole lot. so many questions raised, so much to see. It's good work. I'm wondering if working the shot more intently (I don't know if you did or not - I can't see into your computer, my NSA connections aren't what they used to be <grin>) would have revealed this? Adam On Dec 23, 2007 8:37 PM, Robert Meier <robertmeier@usjet.net> wrote: > Ted, > > If he had bent his knees to get a lower viewpoint, then he would not be > looking down on the foreground as much, and it would not loom so large in > the frame. That is an important part of the picture, while the slanting > verticals are trivial and of no importance. I think he made the right > choice. When you're making an architectural shot on a tripod, you worry > about the verticals. He was concerned with very different things that are > far more important to the image. > > Robert