Thanks everyone! I'm glad these got such good feedback. I went back to a few different areas this weekend, so stay tuned for some more shots this week!
*Edit -- Or.. you can check out my one-a-day photoblog @ www.gregmeuse.net
A very nice series of photo's. I think the first photo would benefit from a tighter crop. The skyline is too evenly placed in the middle of the photograph. I think if you cropped up on the water, it would put more emphasis on the skyline and also the sky itself. Again, a great set of images.
Great set! Love the first and third. Only thing, just being annoying because I was an Architect students.... you shot the John Hancock tower from the wrong angle lol. Supposed to shot it from the other side so the building appears to not have any sides just a flat floating face lol.
Good set, although the first three seem the strongest and most appealing to me. I would definitely crop #1 to a 1x2 ratio for a "pano" look, but taking care not to remove the most appealing parts of the water. #3 looks extremely busy at first sight, but the more I look at it, the more it portrays a fantastic image of the busy city and its internal sense of multiple dimensions of order. It's a great example of an image "made" rather than captured.
Rodolfo Paiz wrote:
Good set, although the first three seem the strongest and most appealing to me. I would definitely crop #1 to a 1x2 ratio for a "pano" look, but taking care not to remove the most appealing parts of the water. #3 looks extremely busy at first sight, but the more I look at it, the more it portrays a fantastic image of the busy city and its internal sense of multiple dimensions of order. It's a great example of an image "made" rather than captured.
Thanks Rodolfo!
I agree with your description of #3. At first glance it seems too busy to keep track of, but the more you look at it the more it seems to work. I have it set as my desktop wallpaper at work and I feel myself getting lost in it while my computer boots up in the morning. You'd be surprised how many different things you notice viewing it at full resolution on a 24" ultrasharp monitor. Thanks again for the feedback!