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Critiques to Al

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Critiques From Al Camp


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Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
7/29/2009 9:23:36 PM

Hi Alisa,
You liked my peeling tar paper photo from long ago. I am visiting your site, and I am amazed that you like slices of buildings/walls and such much as I do. I keep most of my images as these hidden away, having gotten a negative review by my professor in college over them. I sure liked this one, very much.:)
        Photo By: Alisa Mudge  (K:7511) Donor

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
4/25/2008 5:33:17 AM

this image works very well for me
thanks for sharing
        Photo By: Shiv Kumar Surya  (K:17362)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
4/25/2008 5:16:24 AM

very nice
        Photo By: James Hager  (K:6285)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
4/25/2008 5:12:22 AM

I live in an area where sandhill cranes fly over and land, but have never been able to get close enough for such a photo.

Very nice, much appreciated, thanks for sharing
        Photo By: James Hager  (K:6285)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
3/16/2008 2:38:38 AM

You indeed enjoy pattern in many of your images, including this one that caught my eye. Congrats!

Usted goza de hecho del patrón en muchas de sus imágenes, incluyendo ésta que cogió mi ojo. ¡Congrats!
        Photo By: Gustavo Scheverin  (K:164501) Donor

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
3/16/2008 2:11:33 AM

love the detail, especially in the whites

ame el detalle, especialmente en los blancos
        Photo By: M  jalili  (K:69009) Donor

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
3/15/2008 5:12:03 PM

How about, where's the sugar?
Aren't horses fun?
Especially if someone else pays for their food

thanks for sharing
        Photo By: Debra Garside  (K:2869)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
3/15/2008 5:10:15 PM

any fish in there? Just kidding. Fun photo to inspect, lots going on
        Photo By: Debra Garside  (K:2869)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
3/15/2008 4:55:01 PM

you live in a gorgeous area of the world, Shiv, keep sharing
        Photo By: Shiv Kumar Surya  (K:17362)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
3/15/2008 4:24:47 PM

Nice, very nice, probably a long shutter speed. tripod?
        Photo By: Keith Saint  (K:13784) Donor

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
9/28/2007 1:50:15 AM

ah, you posted about same time with The midnight train
Woman's skin is porcelein-like
I don't agree with darkening photo to make look like night using gama in PhotoShop. Guy darkened it too much
I like yours just the way it was. Surreal!

Thanks for nice comment on my rider
Al
        Photo By: Vandy Neculae  (K:7990)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
9/27/2007 5:37:11 AM

this photo screams tone me. Try making a sepia tone out of it.
it makes it even a warmer image
        Photo By: William  Santos  (K:580)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
9/27/2007 5:18:29 AM

Caught my eye, not your usual sunset photo. thanks for sharing
        Photo By: deniz senyesil  (K:4052)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
9/13/2007 4:01:41 AM

Got a lot of these flowers in the neighborhood, but no butterflies. Nice use of depth of field. Thanks for kind comment on my horse picture
        Photo By: Dave Stacey  (K:150877) Donor

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
4/10/2007 2:50:16 AM

You could always sell one of them on eBay and use the money for something like doing now. perhaps a nice 2 1/4 for good image quality yet ease of use. Brett Weston and Ansel Adams both, in later years, switched to the small format.

yeah, my son is now 18 and quite the musician. He's playing the guitar now as I type. Small town life is so great.

al
        Photo By: Bob Brins  (K:4130)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
4/9/2007 3:19:48 AM

Bob, this image jumped right out at me, along with close up of the rose. But being a B&W kind of guy, I choose this image to say hello. thanks for making me a friend. Keep that eye working even when commuting
Al
        Photo By: Bob Brins  (K:4130)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
3/16/2007 9:49:18 PM

You certainly take a variety of images. Thanks for comment. I love your aspen. I like them, too. see www.seeinglight.com for more
Al - how about that new Mark III? wow
        Photo By: Al Ungar  (K:4626)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
10/12/2004 5:16:08 AM

This sure caught my eye. Ever try Polaroid film, then manipulate the film after exposure to make it look like a small impressionistic painting? Thanks for sharing
        Photo By: Jimmie "DeeDee" Jones  (K:368)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
10/12/2004 5:14:17 AM

Geez I like this. The image just bounced off my screen. Not like what you often see, for sure. Love the subtle gradations. Thanks for sharing
        Photo By: tess campbell  (K:515)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
10/12/2004 5:12:54 AM

I see fields look a lot a like no matter which side of the globe they are viewed. Thanks for sharing.
        Photo By: Finn Kristensen  (K:1230)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
10/12/2004 5:11:30 AM

What an interesting image. I haven't checked in with usefilm for months. Had a couple minutes late at night and thought I'd check my friends sites. Thanks for sharing
        Photo By: Shiv Kumar Surya  (K:17362)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
3/25/2004 6:52:37 PM

Loved the image, hated the 240+ download size of image. It should have around 80K or less (level 5, 72 resolution). Us folks with 28K/56K modems needed well over a minute to download
Take care
        Photo By: tess campbell  (K:515)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
9/9/2003 6:10:41 PM

Beth, Nice work. As to taking course at Cornell, what I did in college was put together a portfolio (10 to 20 mounted pictures) and went to the head of the photography courses and showed them. I was able to get into the advance photography section of the Art Department by having the pre-requisite starting photography credits waived. As you know, you can't get into the basic photo classes unless you are an art major. But you can get past that by having the instructor waive the requirement, which is done with the portfolio. I also used the school newspaper's wet darkroom to produce pictures. You can join the staff, shoot a few pics to keep in good standing and then use darkroom. Just a thought. Good luck with all.
        Photo By: Beth Lasoff  (K:539)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
8/29/2003 6:17:09 PM

Nice shot, but I don't think you need the stuff framing the image. Let the picture speak for itself. Maybe you could crop out stuff like that in the future.
        Photo By: Finn Kristensen  (K:1230)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
8/29/2003 6:14:57 PM

I sure like this moment. Reminds me of home. Except no one likes to see rain clouds over their hay.
        Photo By: Finn Kristensen  (K:1230)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
8/25/2003 6:52:29 PM

Sorry, doesn't make it for me. You need a bit more contrast. Focus looks soft, too. I posted a different cropping then yours (I didn't think sky and such at top was needed; wanted to focus on the blurred water and rocks.)
        Photo By: Adam Burton  (K:90)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
8/25/2003 6:27:37 PM

Hard to get those butterflies to hold still on flowers while you get close enough for a photo. Slightest movement can send the critters flying away. And who says you a little enhancement with the computer is unfair, or can't produce a great picture? Nice!!
        Photo By: Scott Zinman  (K:139)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
8/25/2003 6:25:25 PM

very innarestin' photo. I, too, was taken by bridge disappearing into the semi-blurred forest.
        Photo By: Rachel Hall  (K:0)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
8/25/2003 7:51:41 AM

Sure is great to see someone take the time to use a tripod for a photo. Good color saturation, which is hard to do with this flower some times. Cameras tend to over or under expose. Next time try saving file for Net at a lower quality level, like around 4 with PhotoShop. This file was 209K!! At a lower level, which still looks great on the Net, it would have been 50 to 60K at most and would load a lot faster. (Oh, with karma of 11K you must already know about oversized files. Sorry)
        Photo By: Kim Culbert  (K:37070)

Critique By: Al Camp  (K:539)  
8/24/2003 7:45:55 PM

Agradecimentos para comentários amáveis. Você é muito bom em momentos especiais dos povos da captação.
        Photo By: André Bermak  (K:14443)


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