Erik_7Xi wrote:It totally depends on the picture -
Balanced? Is that the right word here? All the 'weight' (both physically and in terms of what percentage of the frame is non-empty) is on the right. Apart from that, the aircraft is taxiing to the right, but the viewer cannot see where it's going. Example B has some sort of a 'viewing line' (if that's the right word): the viewer looks where the aircraft is going, after which the background subjects get attention. Or am I just the only one trying to look at my photos like this?CBR wrote:I guess you got slapped on the wrist for B: Airframe centering ... imo generally only C: Wingtip-to-wingtip creates balanced pictures (... thats what I voted for).
I'm not. I'm just interested to hear what other people have to say about this. Not just by answering the poll question, but by explaining it as well. Your reply is a good example for what I was hoping for, so thanks for that!Erik_7Xi wrote:And don't feel too bad about these 'people' that judge photos on that particular site ....
LarsEHAM wrote:Crop so it looks good!
DJdeRidder wrote:Apart from that, the aircraft is taxiing to the right, but the viewer cannot see where it's going. Example B has some sort of a 'viewing line' (if that's the right word): the viewer looks where the aircraft is going, after which the background subjects get attention. Or am I just the only one trying to look at my photos like this?
DJdeRidder wrote:Balanced? Is that the right word here? All the 'weight' (both physically and in terms of what percentage of the frame is non-empty) is on the right. Apart from that, the aircraft is taxiing to the right, but the viewer cannot see where it's going. Example B has some sort of a 'viewing line' (if that's the right word): the viewer looks where the aircraft is going, after which the background subjects get attention.
Another example below for a 'static' subject. I still think it's an ugly cropping method, but does the fact that the aircraft is standing still make it any different?
Hi Iwan, the thing is: a picture like this can be cropped to get a great composition, but the noise in the result is spoiling it (especially, since the original was already shot at ISO800). Noise is one of the downsides of extreme cropping, lack of visible details the other. Based on some of the pictures that I see on this forum, there are quite a few people that don't mind extreme cropping, but it's not my cup of tea...Iwan Bogels wrote:Here is one of my favorite crops from 2011, which many people didn't like. It's also one of the most extreme crops in my collection.
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