Wow, glad to see this thread getting used!!
Very nice shot of the dragonfly. Good background blur. Not sure what aperture you used, but f/3 or 4 could have blurred out the background even more. Sometimes that makes a nice aesthetic look. I also think it could be offset (left or right) a bit from center, which would add a little more interest.
Kinda going with what I said to Randy, a little motion blur could go a long way here. For some reason (IMO) moving water tends to look more natural when it's shot with a little motion blur. This same shot with maybe 1/2 or 1 sec exposure would be killer!
This is a very tricky image to expose properly. Shot into the sun (right?) on a very cloudy day. So the landscape comes out dark, and the sky gets a little over exposed. This is the perfect place to use either a graduated ND filter, or HDR tactics. I also notice it's a bit blurry and grainy... maybe too high of an ISO was used? A different crop helps too. Taking off about 1/6 of the bottom of this image helps balance it a bit more.
Nice landscape! To me, looks like it needs a touch of color editing. I'm not getting deep blacks out of the rocks on the left. Maybe frame it a bit higher or lower next time to add "visual interest"?
RICHIET wrote:JamesDowning wrote:
Really nice picture James. You have a good leading line with the shoreline that takes you to the trees. You made the best of what nature offered there. The only drawback is the picture is a bit unbalanced. You have a lot of good detail on the right but the left side is basically empty. If there were some rocks or weeds or even a family of ducks in the lower left water, about a third of the way up, I think the picture would be great. As an experiment, you could try photoshopping in some objects just to see if or how it changes the feel of the picture. One other thing, you have no information listed on exposure or lens. I think information on such a good twilight long exposure would be really helpful to others.
Thanks! Good point about the negative space on the left. There were some ducks hanging around me while I was shooting, but due to the long exposures I was doing, they would always end up as shadows. So I ended up framing them out for most shots.
Speaking of exposure, here's the data: 30 sec shutter, f/8, ISO 100, 26mm focal length