croppedcrop


Photo Information
22/07/2008 - 09:06Robin
CategoryFlowers & plants
Shutter Speed1/125
Aperturef/6.7
LensN/A
ISO100
Focal Length55mm
Views/Likes44/0

Keith Grant

Link Posted 23/07/2008 - 00:17
A striking image, Robin! I love the oil painting feel to the background, capturing the colors of field, hill and sky just right. The color of the grass/wheat in the foreground is a little startling at first, but not in an unpleasing way, and to see the grains bending horizontally is not typical. Can I ask how much the colours have been tweaked in post-processing? Very nice.
Keith

K100D Super, DA 18-55, M 50 1.4, M 100 4 Macro

"The present is the object of vision, and what I see before me at any given second is a full field of color-patches scattered just so. The configuration will never be repeated." ~ Annie Dillard

Robin

Link Posted 23/07/2008 - 18:36
hi Keith - thanks for the positive comment -i realise my style might not be to everyones (the purists) taste! I'm particularly interested in the realm between reality and imagination - (photography and painting), so i like to push the colours/contrasts etc as far as i can before the picture stops working. I use an extremely basic version of iphoto, and basically juggle the enhance/brightness/contrast settings repeatedly - tempted to look at photoshop but am in no rush.
Rob

Keith Grant

Link Posted 23/07/2008 - 19:14
Robin wrote:
I'm particularly interested in the realm between reality and imagination - (photography and painting)

I think you've been successful at combining the two here. Realism and imagination seem to me like ends of a spectrum that are available to artists in the fields of both photography and painting - I know of realistic painters and impressionist photographers. Again, thanks for the image, and the creative stimulation!
Keith

K100D Super, DA 18-55, M 50 1.4, M 100 4 Macro

"The present is the object of vision, and what I see before me at any given second is a full field of color-patches scattered just so. The configuration will never be repeated." ~ Annie Dillard


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