Author Topic: ■ The Photography Megathread ■  (Read 286954 times)

If you have a legal case, you have a legal case.
But minors can't have legal cases. They can have a parent or attorney represent them, but can't directly sue. If duke 383's parents don't want to take the time to help him, he would either have to hire a lawyer or hope the infringer decided to be nice.

Sometimes accusing people of stealing your pictures can backfire. About a month ago a band used a picture without permission, and when the photographer asked them to pay or stop, the band just posted something along the lines of "someone wants money for his picture, but we think that's greedy." It gets better: the majority of people sided with the photographer, so the band started deleting those comments, leaving only the one's on their side. I'm sure in the end the photographer didn't take much of a reputation hit, but I think that having a copyright dispute isn't the best thing for a beginning photographer to have to deal with.



If I can figure out how to hold my phone's camera properly, I might get more.


Some concert photographer from last night.










Finally got around to getting the pics I took on my trip to the Wisconsin Dells! :)
You can click on the images to see the full sized version.

Forest Walkway


I like to call this one..
Towers of Doge


Murky Forest


Concrete Invasion


Midday Docks


Obscured Beauty


Middle of Nowhere (This one took a lot of editing to clean up nicely)


And last but not least...
Googly-Eyed


Thanks, hope you enjoyed the pictures! :)

They are kind of boring :\

When I look at those pictures, I don't think "wow look at this good photography", I think "wow look at this cool trip this guy took."

Same goes for Tammy's pictures, too, but they're a bit closer to what I'd say is good photography. A lot of them are close but not quite there (as in, there's a small thing you could've done to make it a more striking shot.)

They are kind of boring :\

When I look at those pictures, I don't think "wow look at this good photography", I think "wow look at this cool trip this guy took."

Same goes for Tammy's pictures, too, but they're a bit closer to what I'd say is good photography. A lot of them are close but not quite there (as in, there's a small thing you could've done to make it a more striking shot.)
You should critique mine (: I like to know how to improve.

This photo has been edited, I will admit, but for some odd reason I couldn't find the original + the 20 other pictures... Though this was one of my favorites. I spent a week-end just casually strolling around my house / neighborhood looking for micro picture opportunities, and this happened to be one of my favorites, in my neighbor's backyard.


It was only after the picture that I noticed the dead flower. I would've picked it, but then I guess it kinda adds some contrast.
Or some artistic stuff like that.
If I find my other pictures, I'll post em (:

All the pictures look amazing, especially OP's



A quick picture I took while biking

I hate these "photography rules" that are embedded into pictures. Everything and anything should be art, and just because of some made up rules some guy who was going willy nilly made official. If I take a picture of the Niagra Falls but I show too much of the sky, does that mean the picture is ugly, and that Niagra Falls is too? I really hate it man. Number two or one thing I hate about art and its conisseurs.

I know this message was posted a long ass time ago but I just need to point out how ridiculous this post is.

The "everything and anything should be art" approach to art is bullstuff. I guess, of course, anything can be art but that sure as stuff doesn't mean it's going to be good. Rule of thirds and compositional rules aren't some arbitrary rules that snooty people set because it gets their rocks off, they are factors that legitimately lead to a good looking photograph.

To use your Niagara falls example...



That photo is boring. It's not boring because I said it's boring or because it's breaking some arbitrary rule you set, it's boring because it's boring. It may portray the Niagara Falls which you may think is beautiful, but it's not good photography in and of itself because it's a closely cropped shot in midday and does not capture a particularly striking view of the falls.



This image of the falls is striking, because it A) captures a unique view of the falls and B) follows several rules of photography and art in general, the biggest thing going for it is warm color/cool color contrast between the golden mist and the blue/white of the falls.

Furthermore there is a difference between an ugly photo and a boring/bad photo. Digital cameras have gotten to a point where any photo will be technically good looking, and the only thing you can really do to make a shot ugly is either pick an ugly subject or filter-rape it. The problem ends up being if a photo is boring or poorly composed, or what have you.

Let's look at it in another art form. If I bang on a piano or just kind of make random intervals and weird chords without any real thought or work and say that it's music, does that mean it's good music? Of course not. The rules of music are such that we've discovered what makes a song sound good, and when people write music they adhere to those rules. The same goes for photography, and to suggest that you somehow have a higher understanding of what art is really about than people who have spent their lives learning about art and what makes it good or bad is pretentious and more than a bit wrong.

Of course you're entitled to your own opinion, but to suggest that the rules of what make a photo good are arbitrary/useless is, again, false.

here are some stuffty photos i took in photo and editing class.



Where's the place in the first pic?
Those are very nice by the way.