I like the watery blue reflection and the lines of it crossing the others. Part of me thinks there's too much white on the right side that draws my attention away from it. Maybe it's beause the lines all flow that way. But it's just a shallow thought.
That could very well be the problem. I could have cropped it out, in fact I did on one picture, but then something was missing. Perhaps because I know the building. It was a lot brighter in my first try. I believe it is still too bright. But to take it down effects the rest. At least to my ability so far.
Thank you Mario
Try a different time of day such as sunrise. You'll get a more colorful reflection, right now there isn't much contrast between what's reflected and what is actually reality.
Look for a much tighter crop which will give you a more abstract feel to the building which I think it would suit.
I use this saying with my students and pass it on here on a regular basis..."if there is something in the setting which is not promoting the entire structure of the setting, it has to go...no matter how pretty, focused or colorful."
Think of it as the characters and setting in a book you are reading...each has to have a function and that function is to move the dialogue along. The space to the left of the reflected structure did nothing to push the plot forward, so I disappeared it, which in turn, tightened up the composition. Everything is now an accountable member of the cast.
Thank you Chris, what you say and have done makes so much sense. I will incorporate that information in future pictures.
Bob
Chris, so I have to ask, sense dealing with the subject (at least for this picture) the reflection, then would I be going to far to use just the reflection/distortion itself. I understand what your saying in principle, but to what extreme, I question, when does it become, for the lack of a better word, useless.
I use this picture only as an example:
I rarely see a reflection I think needs or requires the object also in the frame...afterall, isn't the idea of the image to show a reflective surface, distorted or straight. I also find few things useless, though have been known to toss a few in the circular file because, for whatever reason, they're simply not workable.
The other object, to me in this sense is just the donor organ...breathing life back into that organ is the task and outcome...that, to me is what it means to be an artist and not just another photography hack.