boomguy57
Well-known
My brief impressions of your work (and also the way you've displayed it, as this is also useful to consider):
- some excellent shots (4am Taxi Ride comes immediately to mind), but I'd suggest some ruthless editing to keep the standard uniformly high. Your people shots gallery leads with Gritty street, which doesn't seem gritty to me. Impact and meaning mean more to me than technical excellence (it's easy to produce very boring, technically excellent work). Looking at a page of thumbnails is a good way to see which images jump out at you. Most processing software allows you to compare a bunch of images this way. Work to your strengths. Editing can be very challenging, and I'm certainly no expert.
- try to keep image size to allow the whole image to be viewed in its entirety without scrolling. I had to scroll vertically for many, and there was no white space at the sides. Some space around each image makes it easier to view on a web page. I suggest max 800px wide and about max 700px high. Not everyone has a big, wide screen.
- there is noticeable processing variability both in bw and colour. As far as possible, try to have a consistent "look" to your images, this becomes part of your style. I accept that some subjects are high contrast and others not, and colour saturation and balance can be tricky. Over-processed images get tiresome and draw attention to the processing rather than the content. I'd suggest comparing your strong work with examples from recognised photographers you admire, and use those examples when working on your post processing skills. It might also be an idea to separate colour film from colour digital, as they are very different looks. Also, in some images the focus of attention is too underexposed e.g. the people in Sunday walk - we are programmed to look at faces, so always pay close attention to how they are rendered in pp.
- Some colour images just might have more impact in bw (e.g. Nice guy) - worth experimenting before you upload?
- Give careful thought to titles. Some titles seem trite e.g. Zzzzz, Old man (is that really how you'd define him?) or too generalised e.g. Buildings (what are you saying with that image?), or confusing e.g. Bridge (my eye is drawn to the Hagia Sophia and to the fishing rods, not the actual bridge), and, funnily enough, Confused. NB there are two different images with the same title of Bridge. If you wanted to sell your photos, or just want to avoid confusion, they need a unique title or identifier. Also, in two instances the same image is displayed twice with two different titles - Old man, and mmm..., as well as London and London View - confusing!
- About me page doesn't tell me enough about you and your photography.
Pictures that I liked: Top Pics: 4am Taxi Ride and Feeling Sad. Other galleries: Make up, Striking tattoo II, Nice guy, East End boy, Life is..., Sunshine in Brockwell Park, Tokyo fish market II, Traveller, Lost in Translation, Zebra man.
Asking for critique is always fraught with difficulty - you will inevitably get conflicting opinions. And unqualified ones. And everything in between. Keith's advice about number of views is a very good indicator!
Thanks for sharing your pictures. I did enjoy looking at them.
cheers,
I agree with a lot of this, and it's probably better-said that I might have attempted on my own 😀