In this street shot, the man is making Indian bread, called paratha. The size of this paratha is quite big.
Your C&C will be highly appreciated.
Regards,
Tejal
IMG_8992 by Tejal Imagination, on Flickr
In this street shot, the man is making Indian bread, called paratha. The size of this paratha is quite big.
Your C&C will be highly appreciated.
Regards,
Tejal
IMG_8992 by Tejal Imagination, on Flickr
Very nice, Tejal. I would probably change the colour of the orange (?) coloured can at the left edge to a dull blue/grey. But then, the picture would not be authentic I suppose.
Looks delicious.
Could this be the original "pizza" ?
yes, agree with you. The color of paratha is also important. Otherwise it will loss its flavor which we can make out from the pic. The can was there in my mind too, but the left side was open, so if i try to hide that can behind that man then I would have got that bright open sky. And other part was quite clutter and would have created destruction. But this can could be cloned. Let me try, if i could do that.
Tejal, the blue fabric at the right hand side does not contribute to your image nor the environment of the shot, Maybe you can delete that using Content Aware? I cook paratha too but not that way...that is the hard authentic way... I manage to cook some Indian dishes too but not so much chilli. I am still training hubby on hot chilli foods.
Nicely captured, did you use 1/100sec to capture the smoke?
Very nice, Tejal. Your street photography is always interesting.
I'm not a street photographer but IMO the shot is composed nicely. I'd try the B/W conversion to simplify it.
Hi Tejal.... Again, I like this shot but, the petrol can seems like it attracts too much attention in its reddish orange color. I used NIK Viveza (which I believe you have) and placed a control point on the petrol can. I reduced the saturation and the brightness and also used the red slider to reduce the red of the can. As for the paratha, I placed another control point and reduced the brightness a bit and increased the saturation. I think that a very little change improves the total image...
This is the result...