Jacob, just viewed your set again but this time on my TV and it looks so much better than my phone. The spire image looks mind blowing on TV.
You have my vote 👍🏻
keepclicking wrote:
Jacob, just viewed your set again but this time on my TV and it looks so much better than my phone. The spire image looks mind blowing on TV.
You have my vote 👍🏻
Thank you kindly Parul! This one was difficult to process due to the high contrast. It is a bracketed image.
Jacob, you did fantastic work on your trip! All of these images are great and for me number two is very special, the soft modeling light and the tangible sense of shape and depth is wonderful, I would be printing that if it were mine.
You definitely have a vote from me.
Dan Cross wrote:
This is an outstanding set of images, each and every one! My favorites are 1, 6 and 9. Nine reminds me of a protective parent and their child.
Thank you kindly Dan! About #9 - now when you mentioned it, the comparison is quite apt! I was only drawn to it because of good framing
Ross Martin wrote:
Jacob, you did fantastic work on your trip! All of these images are great and for me number two is very special, the soft modeling light and the tangible sense of shape and depth is wonderful, I would be printing that if it were mine.
You definitely have a vote from me.
GroovyGeek wrote:
What time in October? You timed the cottonwoods perfectly.
The fog over The Blues is stunning and my favorite one. Would love some day to be lucky enough to fly a drone there with the fog rolling in.
Thanks Boyan! I was told that a morning fog is pretty rare around the Overlook. I guess I got lucky. It was on my second day there on October 24. I don't fly a drone but quite a few people were on that day...
Ross Martin wrote:
Jacob, you did fantastic work on your trip! All of these images are great and for me number two is very special, the soft modeling light and the tangible sense of shape and depth is wonderful, I would be printing that if it were mine.
You definitely have a vote from me.
Back to enjoy your set again. All are wonderful in their own way. On #2, the sense of dimensionality is palpable to me, aided by the beautifully smooth tonal transitions, which shows you did an excellent job on processing.
Ross Martin wrote:
Back to enjoy your set again. All are wonderful in their own way. On #2, the sense of dimensionality is palpable to me, aided by the beautifully smooth tonal transitions, which shows you did an excellent job on processing.
Thank you Ross! You are way to kind. I did change my processing approach starting with images from this trip, so your detailed comments are very valuable to me. Perhaps some progress is being made