I appreciate listening in on your photo evaluation/critique process. Your process will be helpful in my image critiques. I think I may be less eager to immediately delete an image that doesn't satisfy me, and more likely to put some time between taking the image and evaluating the image.
self critique is really important. if you don't sit and work out your mistakes, or the things that didn't work well you don't improve. that said, its important not to beat yourself up over a bad image.
Jonas, I agree with your self critique mostly but I think I prefer the subject looking off into the unknown as you have captured them. I like the bit of mystery, not knowing the full story. It makes me look at the image longer to fill in the rest of the story myself. For me, the same is true with wildlife images. I don't like to see the animal looking at the photographer. It feels more like their uninterrupted life was captured. I think your preferred images are great as they are. My two-cwnts worth.
Hi Jonas, I've been enjoying your videos, however, (I know this is about self critiquing lol) for me the cuts in this video were jarring to my eyes, felt sharp/aggressive and (too) many in quick succession. I ended up listening but not watching lol😅 Look forward to your "in the field videos", I enjoy that style more than "in the office" type. Cheers,
I appreciate listening in on your photo evaluation/critique process. Your process will be helpful in my image critiques. I think I may be less eager to immediately delete an image that doesn't satisfy me, and more likely to put some time between taking the image and evaluating the image.
self critique is really important. if you don't sit and work out your mistakes, or the things that didn't work well you don't improve. that said, its important not to beat yourself up over a bad image.
Jonas, I agree with your self critique mostly but I think I prefer the subject looking off into the unknown as you have captured them. I like the bit of mystery, not knowing the full story. It makes me look at the image longer to fill in the rest of the story myself. For me, the same is true with wildlife images. I don't like to see the animal looking at the photographer. It feels more like their uninterrupted life was captured. I think your preferred images are great as they are. My two-cwnts worth.
Hi Jonas, I've been enjoying your videos, however, (I know this is about self critiquing lol) for me the cuts in this video were jarring to my eyes, felt sharp/aggressive and (too) many in quick succession. I ended up listening but not watching lol😅
Look forward to your "in the field videos", I enjoy that style more than "in the office" type.
Cheers,