Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2011/12/24
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I am going to disagree with everyone else and choose the square "Core Crop". I don't like 1 because the shrubbery is ugly. I don't like 3 because it crops part of the white foam at the wave-front. I feel like the full width of the white wave-front is needed to complete the shape it creates. I don't like 4 because it cuts off too much of the green band at the top, looking cramped. Good luck with the show. -- Chris Crawford Fine Art Photography Fort Wayne, Indiana 260-437-8990 http://www.chriscrawfordphoto.com My portfolio http://blog.chriscrawfordphoto.com My latest work! http://www.facebook.com/pages/Christopher-Crawford/48229272798 Become a fan on Facebook On 12/24/11 10:54 PM, "Howard Ritter" <hlritter at bex.net> wrote: >Hello All? > >I'm planning to enter my first show ever, the annual Healing Arts show >put on by and for the local medical community in March next year, open to >entries from the graphic arts. I selected a photo I took at Pictured >Rocks National Lakeshore of Lake Superior on the UP of Michigan on a >short trip there last year. The subject is a wave breaking on a >multilayered sandstone shorline. (OK, OK, I can hear your eyes rolling >now. What new way is there to show a wave breaking on a shore? Well, I >think this is one.) Because the purpose of the trip was not to go to >Pictured Rocks or to take photographs, I wasn't expecting to encounter >any subject that would benefit from FF, so the only camera I took was my >Lumix GF1. Lesson learned (not for the first time). The GF1 is a great >little camera, but the degree of the crop here really would have >benefitted from the larger sensor and greater number of photosites of a >FF camera. > >The viewpoint is an observation platform about 300 feet above the water, >at the top of a nearly vertical cliff, explaining the perspective. I have >uploaded four photos to the Gallery >(http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/hlritter/Fotos/). One is the full >frame, taken at 45mm (90 equiv) containing a good deal of foreground >shrubbery. I started to crop down to clean the worst of this out, but as >I worked, I realized that the picture works best (for me) as an almost >abstract composition with the shore, the breaking wave, and the colors of >the lake bottom forming a nicely proportioned and colorful array. I think >this is an unusual perspective for this subject, and is the reason why I >think it's worth showing. The other three are crops. > >The first photo is the full frame. The second is the largest crop I could >get that contained only a small amount of foreground clutter that I could >PS out (some of which I've already done) and preserved all of the green >water. The problem with the core crop is that I don't like the >near-square proportions much?but I like all of the parts of the >composition. The other two are crops in conventional print proportions, >each using one of the full dimensions of the core crop. The 11x14 is the >proportion I find most pleasing, but even though it occupies the full >horizontal dimension of the core crop, it leaves out a lot of the >beautiful green waters and some shoreline detail. The 8x10 is about as >near-square as I find pleasing to look at, and includes all the water, >but its portrait orientation is at a right angle to the flow of the >picture elements. But I don't think that's a deal-killer, and the 8x10 >may be better in that it comes closer to conforming to the rule of >thirds. And I like the off-center location of the most prominent part of >the wave in the 8x10 crop, as well as the inclusion of more interesting >texture and detail on the shore. Right now I favor the 8x10. > >I'd appreciate C&C, especially on what might look best framed and on a >wall?the square core crop, the 8x10, or the 11x14. Or any other cropping >and proportioning suggestions. > >Thanks in advance. Merry Christmas (and Happy Hanukkah) to all, and to >all a good night! > >?howard > > > >_______________________________________________ >Leica Users Group. >See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information