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Carl Beihl
{K:357} 5/8/2002
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Ken, thanks for your thoughful comments. While the color spots do, I think, give the photo some provocation I've come to agree with you and the others that it's probably a better photograph in simple black and white.
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KEN WINDSOR
{K:30} 5/8/2002
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Let us remember walking into some of the great restaurants of the world, and remember the images seen on the walls. Mostly black and white - they were images such as this one. The lighting is superb - with the figures almost Lowry-like in their appearance. As an exercise in objective thinking it works - but as a pure black and white image it would, to me anyway, work better.
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Cary Shaffer
{K:393} 3/19/2002
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wow, i missed the color the first time through. excellent idea. i think the lady in blue is just enough to upset the balance and make the photo alot more interesting. alone, it is a great shot, but the color adds so much more. i don't know about the guy in red, since it is so small here. i bet an 11x14 is awesome. good eye and good job.
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John Doe
{K:170} 3/18/2002
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Great composition and I love the color. I bet this looks great at 11x17.
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Daniel L Quigley-Skillin
{K:1383} 3/18/2002
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Carl-
The two spotches of color definately made me look deeper into the image. The second one was not quite so evident, due to the size of the image. I bet at 11X17 there is a world of difference as you say.
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Carl Beihl
{K:357} 3/18/2002
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Well, actually, there are two bits of color. The woman in the foreground being pulled through the rain around the corner toward a man in a red jacket about halfway down the block. The intent was to establish a hook on which the viewer could hang some questions, or threads for dialogue. I think the photo works better at 11X17 than at 3X4. Thanks for your feedback.
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E A
{K:727} 3/18/2002
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I personally find the colour spot very distracting; it makes it hard for me too look at what appears to be otherwise a pretty decent shot. What's the motive for colourising that one spot?
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