Hi John,
I think you've missed a bit - I know you know how![]()
Hmmm......strange comment. I guess that takes care of me and this website....
What? You don't get the "tongue-in-cheek" part of Dave's comment, so you get upset and leave?
Wow.
If it were my shot and I desired to make the float more pronounced, I would start by cropping
the image to contain the float and immediate surroundings. IMO there's a whole lot of un-needed
tree and sky in the pic, so removing most of it would allow the float to take center stage.
Mike
Hi John,
Don't rush off...read Dave's comment again.Maybe because I fish I got it right away.
I'm with Mike,a tighter crop will work better.
Exposure and details are very good.
Jim
Last edited by Jim B.; 6th January 2012 at 09:36 PM.
Hi John,
I would say that the primary problem is that the float is too small in the image.
I looked at the EXIF data but, didn't find the focal length that you used for this shot. I would suggest that you use the longest focal length that you have at your disposal in order to make the float bigger in the image and avoid the surroundings as much as possible.
Since this image has already been shot, I suggest that you crop it as much as possible to eliminate the distraction of the sky and tree branches. You will, however end up with an image considerably smaller than your original.
Finally, I would darken the sky which will make the float colors more pronounced.