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Willkommen, Benvinguts, Bienvenidos, Bienvenus, Welcome, ようこそ, Bem-vindo,Bine ati venit, добро пожаловать, Benvenuto...

For any queries, simply Klik and ask or say what U wish:

whoyouknow@gmail.com

. . . ihardlyknowher.com/82733052@N00

I would like to take a moment to thank you for having a look and proffering a comment!

If 4 any reason U No Who's verbosity or random comments are not welcome... Just delete them... and no offence will be taken. Thank Goodness There Is Still Free Expression In Most Parts Of Our Global Village!

Please accept my apologies in advance for not visiting your streams on regular basis... U No Who has just lack of time.
Living in real world takes more time more than otherwise... and demands attention more often than not, regrettably.

HEADS' UP +MORE!
Should you create a website, do make certain that you do so with a "proxy" that hides your private data. You will not regret the small additional charge that your service provider may charge!

"In the nude, all that is not beautiful is obscene."
- Robert Bresson

"Because God created it the human body can remain nude and uncovered and preserve its splendour and its beauty."
- Pope John Paul II

God made women beautiful, and he gave men eyes to behold the beauty of his best creation. And U No Who does!

Shame upon the Global Village for your eyes;

www.war-photographer.com/

Another:
www.amivitale.com

I do not profess to be a photographer of any skill at all, simply clicking to what catches my eye, and learning from others... is my pleasure... alone!
www.photophilanthropy.org
www.photovoice.org
www.aperture.org
www.thiaps.com
www.blog.magnumphotos.com
www.fstopmagazine.com
www.foto8.com
www.gettyimages.com
www.unblinkingeye.com
daguerre.org

I will try to reciprocate your kind with hopefully some constructive CRITIQUES... when possible (please take no offence by my lack of comments... meanwhile heartily suggest that your own submissions always have some content of:

i.e.MSP
imagination.emotion.MysterySensualityPassion

-Pulchritudinous = Characterized by or having great physical beauty and appeal.

NB:
MEMORY feeds a culture, nourishes hope and makes a human, human.

STOP ABUSE OF THE WOMEN IN OUR GLOBAL VILLAGE:

Less Said Is Best Said... but not in this case!

amnes2.jpg


Do donate to a charity of your choice!

4 The Fool With In U No Who:

Make yours @ BigHugeLabs.comMake yours @ BigHugeLabs.com


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Many of us struggle with providing photograph critiques. What do we say? What do we focus on? What is the proper way to give a critique? While I freely admit I’m not the expert at giving critiques, I’ve come up with some steps to help me when I do give them by researching various online guides and rewording them into layman terms.

Critiques can be a useful improvement tool for both the person getting it and the person giving it, if done properly.

Step 1: Technical Quality.

Exposure: Is it over exposed or under exposed? A properly exposed photo will have some details in the shadow. Are details missing because of the improper exposure? What do you think caused this? How could the photographer prevent this from happening in the future?

Depth of Field (DOF): Is it shallow or deep? Does it work for this photo? Does it add to the overall affect of the photo or detracts from it?

Lighting/White Balance: Is it too soft? Too harsh? Does the type of lighting add to or takes away from the overall quality of the photo? Is the white balance appropriate for the photo? Does it look too yellowish, greenish, orangish? All signs of an improperly set white balance.

Focus: Is the main subject in or out of focus? Has the picture lost the intended focal point? Is there a clear focal point? Is it appropriate for the photo? Should the focal point have been somewhere else to make the photo more interesting?

Step 2: Composition

Background Position: Does it contain a fore, middle, and background? Is this properly framed, focused? Is it taking away from the intended subject? Is there too much distracting clutter?

Rule of Thirds or Centered: Where is the main subject? Is it centered, in the corner, somewhere else? Does this add to the photo or detracts from it? Where would you have centered it?

Colors/Tonal Range: Are the colors too vivid, harsh, muted? What are the primary, secondary colors? Do they add or take away from the overall photo? If it’s a black and white photo, is it a true representation or is the photo too gray?

Cropping/Framing: Is there wasted space in the photo that should have been cropped out? Is it cropped correctly? Too tight of a cropped where parts have been cut off that should be included (example: An animal that has it’s foot cut out of the photo, a flower that has the petals cut off and isn’t cropped properly).

Lines: Did the photographer make good use of any leading lines to create geometric interest in the photo? Should they have? Do the lines draw your eyes into the photo and to the subject or do they take your eyes away from it? Were they used properly?

Others: Are there too many dark areas? Too many light? Is the photo balanced (are color, light, and subjects arranged properly), if there is a reason that it feels off balanced, explain why.

Step 3: Emotional Appeal

Do you like the photo? What do you like about it? What don’t you like? What would you do differently if you had the chance to take the same photo?

Do you feel that the photographer conveyed the story they were going for with this photo? Why? Why not? Be specific.

How does the photo make you feel? Did the photographer convey a mood or emotion with the photo? Describe what about the photo gave you this feeling or if the photographer should have done something differently.

Compliments of www.ehow.com
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Name:
In Transit
Joined:
July 2006
Email:
whoyouknow [at] gmail.com