- Location
- Nashville, TN
I saw that picture showed up on the Jeep XJ page on Facebooksomtime today.
Nice shot but I would agree to put the jeep on one side, you could just crop it over:
![]()
Remember to have the Subject, in this case the Jeep, facing into the frame! Not leaving the photo!
I saw that picture showed up on the Jeep XJ page on Facebooksomtime today.
I do like this version.
All of us looove the photos we take of our own jeeps.
As an exercise in objectivity imagine that photo was taken by a stranger and it is of a completely different vehicle, say a stock jeep. Now how do you like it?
Another test is to see how it ages. Will you still love that photo as much in a year or two as you do right now, a mere week after you made it?
This tells me that your photo was one of several taken that day of the same scene with the main variation being the people or vehicle in the photo. You are more likely to wow your audience with a unique subject.
It is not unique if you have to compete with the masses to get your photo. If your subject is common then making a pleasing composition with it will help it stand out. Groupings of 3 is always pleasing to the eye. Try cropping your photo as a vertical to create a group of 3. You will loose the spent flowers and fuzzy pines on the right side of your existing frame and create a nice, simple grouping of three for the eye to follow through your photo: jeep>single tree>waterfall. Simple is good, viewers do not have to work to enjoy your photo.![]()
I like it, but I'd use the 2/3 rule and put the Jeep off to one side and pan out a bit.
golden. :thumbup:More falls for you.
With tree:
![]()
Nice shot but I would agree to put the jeep on one side, you could just crop it over:
![]()
Remember to have the Subject, in this case the Jeep, facing into the frame! Not leaving the photo!
More falls for you.
With tree:
![]()
Without:
![]()
"Rule of thirds" and "zoom out". Panning is horizontal (side to side) movement.
/peeves, I haz them
With tree:
![]()
I'm cool with the way the jeep faces because the front tires lead my eyes back into the photo, not out.It is always better to have the jeep going/facing into the frame and not leaving it.
you guys are way too picky...nice shot!
Try living through a final project critique in design or photography school and you'll see this was pretty mild![]()
"The second you think you know everything there is to know about something, you start falling behind everyone around you"