Quigley Brown said:...It's amazing what can be created with this software. Check out the gallery...
Oh. Wow. Yes, impressive.
You shouldn't have shown me that. Yours don't look as good anymore. j/k
Quigley Brown said:...It's amazing what can be created with this software. Check out the gallery...
fatwoul said:Oh. Wow. Yes, impressive.
You shouldn't have shown me that. Yours don't look as good anymore. j/k
Quigley Brown said:...But, practice makes perfect.
The Wingnut said:Dinerman, your work is starting to resemble that of Richard Estes and Robert Bechtle.
herringbonekid said:
oil on canvas. 22" x 18".
Miss Brill said:I took 200 photos today--and this one is my favorite:
Lady Day said:
fatwoul said:Know what I like about this? The bands of colour that divide the scene. The simplicity. The fact that the deers are looking into the woods. Lots of things.
Miss Brill said:I hadn't noticed the bands of color!
fatwoul said:Well, I kinda saw it like this:
The dimensions of the image aren't golden section (1:1.618), but using simple thirds, the image breaks down quite nicely too:
The biggest tree trunk lies on a third, and leads down to the baby deer, and the white flash of the baby's tail lies on a third up from the bottom of the image, which is where the brown grass ends too.
The adult deer doesn't lie on any of the thirds of the entire image, but when you think of the big tree and the brown grass as framing the centre-left third:
The adult deer's tail and neck lie on thirds, with its white ears crossing on another third.
...I'm so glad I don't have Asperger Syndrome. I'd probably see little white composition lines on everything. lol