My photography is being exhibited!
Nov. 6th, 2014 08:51 pmA few weeks there was an international event called Photo Walk. Locally there was a group in El Paso, and I went with a group of friends. We all had a lot of fun and I got some good shots. They're going an exhibition, you could submit an image that was 12x18" and pay $35 per print, and you get the print when the show is over. So I submitted three.

Of the three, this is my favorite. And it's not being shown. They don't like the fact that it's such a narrow image, even though it's within the print parameters. And if you were to crop the image and cut off the clouds, the image sucks and loses all impact. Oh, well.

I really like this image, catching the guy leaning against the wall really makes it for me.

This one I think is kinda cool, but not as good as the first one.
Regardless, it'll be interesting to be in an exhibition. Even if I don't get to show the print that I want seen.

Of the three, this is my favorite. And it's not being shown. They don't like the fact that it's such a narrow image, even though it's within the print parameters. And if you were to crop the image and cut off the clouds, the image sucks and loses all impact. Oh, well.

I really like this image, catching the guy leaning against the wall really makes it for me.

This one I think is kinda cool, but not as good as the first one.
Regardless, it'll be interesting to be in an exhibition. Even if I don't get to show the print that I want seen.
no subject
Date: 2014-11-19 01:20 pm (UTC)There was a little that could have possibly been cropped from the bottom, but not enough to make a difference, I think some of that foreground is needed. The reason why the image was so tall is I shot it with a 24mm to get as much of the image as I could, so the building was elongated and falling backwards. I used Photoshop's perspective alteration to straighten it, which also compressed the clouds linearly and made them much more interesting, and had to crop it to these proportions. (maybe I'll post what the uncropped image looks like after the perspective correction) During the shoot I only had my 24-105 kit lens, I think I'll be going back to El Paso this Saturday and maybe my wife will indulge me and I can see what my 17-40 will produce, though it's doubtful that the clouds will be cooperative.
Thinking about cropping, before I learned how to cut mattes I frequently printed full frame. I had a special easel that maintained the 35mm 3:2 aspect ratio and banded out, compared to the classic 8x10 easel with the 4:5 ratio, which was perfect if you shot a 4x5 view camera or even 120 roll film with its 6x6cm image. I've also used sliding easels where you could vary the crop on the print all over the place, but I didn't care for those as it was easy to be inconsistent with them. I preferred printing it at 3:2 and then doing the crop with cutting the window on the cover matte. Speaking of which, I need to remember to buy some more mattes when I'm in Phoenix next weekend. I could buy them online for less, but I like supporting my fav camera store, I've been buying there for 35ish years.
This show was at the Consulate General of Mexico (they had some AMAZING musicians there!), and it was just an exhibition with no sales, though apparently there are at least one or two more shows to follow before the prints are sent back to us. The organizer speaks very little English and I effectively don't speak Spanish, so I'm not sure exactly what's going on.