Last edited by Manfred M; 26th May 2013 at 03:43 PM.
Karm,
As I scrolled down and the top of the page came further down your image, it occurred to me to wonder if a tighter crop might be more successful at controlling the "busy-ness" of your image? I love the feel and black and white is perfect for this picture.
Marie
Hi Marie, I'm going to try your suggestion.
Karm
Hi Manfred, Marie suggested I try a tighter focus on the fisherman. I'm going to try her suggestion and then play with your vignetting suggestion.
Karm
Yes, my first thoughts were similar to what Marie has done. Although with a reduced size, I wonder if the vignette is needed now.
Marie, this is a crack-up. I just got home from hiking and sat down and edited this image. I then just went on-line to post it and there's your image which is (almost) exactly like mine. No, I don't mine you playing with my image. Anyone reading this I think Marie's image is so right-on that I'm not going to bother posting my update.
Karm
Manfred, I think yours is a bit too tightly drawn to the subject. However, like you said, it all depends on what you are trying to say.
Karm
Thank you for the kind words, Karm. Your picture is lovely. Is this someone you know?
Because of the relative anonyminity (sp) of the man, I expected that you did not. Did he even know that you took his picture? He seemed rather engrossed in his own world.
Marie
Karm - I wasn't trying to get the perfect image here, just to demonstrate how changing the crop can totally change the way you view the image. When I photograph; I tend to approach a subject much the way I do when I video a scene, getting different types of coverage; establishing shots the set the scene, long, shots, close shots and extreme closeups, just because they all interpret the scene differently..
Dear Manfred,
Your words are so very true - if you look at our 3 crops, they do interpret Karm's image so very differently.
I agree on the importance of examining our subjects from all perspectives.
Marie
That edit looks good to me.