Wonderful composition, texture, three-dimensional look and conversion. Though it would be a really nice image if the person was not included, that person takes the image to a higher level. Exceptionally well done!
Thanks Mike. The cliffs and rock (Carreg Bica, the spat-out rotten tooth of the giant Bica, hence my daft title) were rather dark in the colour original and seem to have lightened effectively in the b+w
Thanks Jean. In fact the person is carrying a child, and probably finding it hard work on the sand, hence the pose
Nicely composed.
Fabulous image, looks so rugged and majestic. Well captured.
I'm obviously missing something
I really like the image; but why such a caption? may be that it is some usage unknown to me?
I like the inclusion of the person, and the rendition in B&W is just right. Whilst I really like it am bemused by the title. You need to tell the story Dave.
Yes...there are some piccies that need to have some narrative in them for your audience to understand what they are looking at...and there are some that tells a story even in silence. I rather like the former than the latter. Like Jim, I like the inclusion of the person/s in the shot because it represents another element to fill the gap. Textures are nice, too. I wonder what the colour version looks like too....???
Outstanding image well done.
Dave
I am crap at thinking up titles for photos and I never think of a title at the time I take a shot (I wonder if anyone else does?). I decided to give this an odd title simply because I wondered whether it would tempt anyone to look at it who might have been disinclined to look at, say, "Coastal scene in black and white".
FWIW this is Carreg Bica on the Ceredigion coast of Wales. According to legend, a giant named Bica spat out this rock, which was actually one of his gnashers giving him hell with toothache! (Amazing what people could think up in olden times, before they became obsessed with moblie phones and selfies).
The child is more visible in the color image but I prefer the B&W version, very nice Dave
I see in colour so I prefer this colour instead. I must be out of touch...sorry.
No need to apologize. Whenever I show my father colour and b+w versions of the same image, he always prefers the colour. I just think that with this particular photo the more shadowed areas respond better to mono treatment. I certainly wouldn't want to exchange the rich colours of some of the other shots I took on this trip for mono