Smokies Sampler |
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Pyzik
Senior Member Joined: 05 January 2008 Country: Poland Location: Poland Status: Offline Posts: 243 |
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Topic: Smokies Sampler Posted: 28 February 2018 at 13:54 |
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From my perspective no 3 is the best. I love balanced, well-thought composition that create the sens of communing with something raw (existential) and primordial... well done. :-)
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Regards,
Pyzik |
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Roger Rex
Senior Member Joined: 30 September 2005 Country: United States Location: North Florida Status: Offline Posts: 8241 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 25 February 2018 at 22:13 | ||
svjetlana - Thanks for your follow-up comment.
Coast and aarif - Thanks for commenting. |
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Hatred corrodes the container it is carried in. http://rogerrex.zenfolio.com/
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aarif
Senior Member Joined: 21 September 2005 Country: United Arab Emirates Location: Dubai Status: Offline Posts: 5514 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 24 February 2018 at 09:52 | ||
That first shot love it the soft light wow
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Coast
Senior Member Joined: 12 May 2015 Country: United States Status: Offline Posts: 3337 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 22 February 2018 at 21:08 | ||
I'm totally w Svjetlana on #1, an image that will probably stay w you for quite a while. Its a moment many of us photographers live for and energizes our Souls.
You weave in and out between color and B&W w great ease. Well Done! I'm not a big fan of that water effect of #7 but thats just me. Makes me want to see you shoot in a Ghost Town Yes, our photos are self portraits All the Best_________Coast |
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svjetlana
Alpha Eyes group Joined: 05 March 2009 Country: Serbia Status: Offline Posts: 7523 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 22 February 2018 at 21:02 | ||
I understand what you mean Roger about privacy and I believe most people are like you. But your quote above is something that says a lot about process that you create by your mind when looking at strangers. They are always perceived as a projection of your mind only not necessary as they truly are.
I see. Was the previous image from your previous post also self-portrait?
You are welcome. Hey, isn't it one of the reasons we join Dyxum, to hear a different opinion? Thank you for posting your images Roger. I like your style in photography, Svjetlana |
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Roger Rex
Senior Member Joined: 30 September 2005 Country: United States Location: North Florida Status: Offline Posts: 8241 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 21 February 2018 at 10:51 | ||
Thanks all for commenting.
Svjetlana - This was like conversing with a new friend and this is not at all uncomfortable but this is not the norm for "people" shooting in that he was not a stranger. He was the only person in the church and while there for himself he clearly was also an informal guide in that when I stepped in he immediately asked if I had any questions about the church and asked if I'd like him to move for my photos (his meaning, get out of the way) to which I said "no, quite the contrary, do you mind if I include you in the picture?" I am comfortable with people, find new folks like this gentleman fascinating and interesting (every person has a story) but taking images of strangers is disquieting to me. I cherish my privacy, am a private person, and am projecting that value onto others. This is not part of my "Lonely Man" series - in that series the man or woman will be very small in the frame and not identifiable (like the image below, a self-portrait by the way). I appreciate your quite thought provoking comments on this subject in this thread and in others. Thank you. Roger |
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Hatred corrodes the container it is carried in. http://rogerrex.zenfolio.com/
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svjetlana
Alpha Eyes group Joined: 05 March 2009 Country: Serbia Status: Offline Posts: 7523 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 20 February 2018 at 13:52 | ||
I wonder how did you feel Roger shooting that first image?
It is very fine fine image nicely composed and nicely lit. I like it very much. There is serene and peaceful mood all over the image. And the story that goes with it is fitting the image. His music must have been along the lines of the image. The whole "creation" is very soothing. It looks like people photography is not that hard for you as you might have original thought. I also like the rest of the set but it is not as much a departure from your usual, which I also enjoy as is the first image. This image fits fine in your "lonely man" project, right? Svjetlana |
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angora
Senior Member Joined: 02 March 2014 Country: Netherlands Status: Offline Posts: 5206 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 20 February 2018 at 13:12 | ||
great series!! #6 is not exactly my cuppa (T! looks veeery interesting but lack of focus seems distracting here), all others look great!
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maewpa
Alpha Eyes group Joined: 27 October 2007 Country: United Kingdom Location: Thailand Status: Offline Posts: 7218 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 20 February 2018 at 08:57 | ||
The first shot is beautiful and a perfect portrait. I am not sure his hands have enough light on them though, given their apparent importance in the context. Really like it all the same.
Can't quite decide about #6 - I think no, but there is something about it. I'd certainly give that another try. #7 definitely yes though - got the water just right I think. And #5 and #9 both very nicely conceived and executed - with different intents and results obviously. #2 and #3 seem like very nice parts of a larger set but they are good, and the only one that doesn't really work for me is #4, although I find #10 a great concept rather than a good photo. Always great to see you work a place though - hit or miss, there's nearly always something in a shot I like or admire. |
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Paul aka maewpa
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Atom Ant
Senior Member Assignments Graduate Joined: 10 October 2013 Country: Singapore Status: Offline Posts: 1176 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 20 February 2018 at 06:23 | ||
Excellent work Roger.
Personally I'm particularly taken with #5 & #8 - both quite ambitious shots that work very well. #5 has enough detail to give us a surprisingly good idea of the landscape while directing attention firmly to the colours. In #8 the mist & water drops set a lovely stage for the (fractal?) pattern of the foreground with foreground diagonals giving way to verticals in the background. |
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No need for formality - call me Tony! My Flickr Photostream
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Fred_S
Senior Member Joined: 12 January 2017 Country: Netherlands Location: Noord Holland Status: Offline Posts: 13588 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 19 February 2018 at 18:08 | ||
Fully agree. A beautiful set with #1 and 9 on top of my list as well. |
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Jozioau
Alpha Eyes group Joined: 13 May 2007 Country: Australia Location: Melbourne Status: Online Posts: 10277 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 19 February 2018 at 06:27 | ||
This is a great set, for its aesthetic beauty as well as its diversity. Nice to see this departure and extension from your more familiar work.
Of this wonderful set of images, #1 with that window side-lighting the musician concentrating on his instrument, and #9 rendered in soft charcoal tones are the standouts for me. Thanks for sharing. Edited by Jozioau - 19 February 2018 at 06:32 |
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"Your first 10,000 photographs are your worst" - Henri Cartier-Bresson
My FlickrPro site |
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waldo_posth
Alpha Eyes group Joined: 01 August 2012 Country: Germany Location: Potsdam Status: Offline Posts: 7921 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 18 February 2018 at 22:50 | ||
Wonderful series of images, Roger!
In terms of abstractness of nature I find #5 and #6 outstanding - #6, like a pool of jewels, and the image still allows to recognize the water, but it gives me a new way to understand what "crystal clear" means. #5 is fascinating in its combination of colors - and no more than colors. #3 and #4 are also fascinating. Along the pattern, through the door, through the window into nature - that's a beautiful journey. And the signs of the time in the wooden structure, the monochrome, show a very special beauty - I don't know whether inanimate objects can have dignity, but that's it what the image is telling me. Finally I have to mention #9 and #10: #9 as a perfect depiction of a "smoky" landscape and #10 as a dialogue between two trees, one upright and standing still, the other bending and moving. Admirable work - thank you for sharing it! Edited by waldo_posth - 18 February 2018 at 23:22 |
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"Stare, pry, listen, eavesdrop. Die knowing something. You are not here long." (Walker Evans) http://www.flickr.com/photos/waldo_posth/
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Sönke Henning
Senior Member Joined: 02 February 2008 Country: Germany Status: Offline Posts: 320 |
Post Options Quote Reply Posted: 18 February 2018 at 20:22 | ||
#6 is very beautiful in my eyes.
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http://www.caucasus-pictures.blogspot.com
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