Originally Posted by
Dave Humphries
Hi Maurice,
I do hope you find my thoughts helpful, that is my intention.
When I first saw this, I immediately recognised that the biggest problem (for me) was that the subject is overwhelmed, compositionally, by the surroundings.
I'm definitely not wishing to sound clever, just that I've been here before myself and now (usually) think these things through and (given time), capture something that doesn't have the issues I'm going to mention below.
Given the title, the image should be about the tower, so that really implies it needs to be dominant in the frame.
While the grasses are a nice foreground element, due to the camera position close to them and focal length used, they are too big and over power the tower.
When the initial shot was viewed through the V/F, or on the rear LCD, it would have been fairly evident that the large diagonal leaning 'post' should not be there - so either shoot anyway and accept that it must be cloned in PP, or try to find a better angle to exclude it - if possible.
The same goes for the other 'posts' (or are they all gravestones edge on?) between us and the subject, they are a distraction, because we're wondering what they are (well I am) and while they're the same hard texture as the tower, but they're clearly not part of the tower.
I see two possibilities at time of capture, neither of which might have been practical in the time you had Maurice.
If you could have moved backwards along the optical axis you have here and used a longer focal length (or cropped significantly), this would have reduced the size of the grasses relative to the tower.
Ideally, a viewpoint to left or right that excludes the posts too, would have been better.
John's cloning solves many of the issues and gives a more balanced composition than the simple crop you tried
HTH, Dave