pancakes

MicrostockGroup Sponsors


Author Topic: Rejected Istock image - advice please.  (Read 35200 times)

0 Members and 2 Guests are viewing this topic.

« Reply #100 on: September 24, 2010, 09:46 »
0
I'm terribly sorry I didn't take enough time out of my day to research your sensibilities and compose an appropriate response that would not irritate you.  I shall retreat to my hovel to count my downloads whilst you prepare yet another still life of random antiquities to take the world by storm.

ROFLMAO


« Reply #101 on: September 24, 2010, 09:46 »
0
I'm terribly sorry I didn't take enough time out of my day to research your sensibilities and compose an appropriate response that would not irritate you.  I shall retreat to my hovel to count my downloads whilst you prepare yet another still life of random antiquities to take the world by storm.

That would probably be more beneficial for both of us.

There is absolutely no point you being on this thread whatsoever.

« Reply #102 on: September 24, 2010, 09:49 »
0
But there is.  Tyler pays me a nickel a post, as the mere mention of my username drives google crazy.

« Reply #103 on: September 24, 2010, 09:50 »
0
Ka-ching!

« Reply #104 on: September 24, 2010, 09:50 »
0
But there is.  Tyler pays me a nickel a post, as the mere mention of my username drives google crazy.

Have you ran out of downloads to count? ;-)

« Reply #105 on: September 24, 2010, 09:53 »
0
But there is.  Tyler pays me a nickel a post, as the mere mention of my username drives google crazy.

That would explain the profusion of pointless posts on a newbie forum where you have displayed no real intent on helping a newbie then? ;-)

« Reply #106 on: September 24, 2010, 10:00 »
0
That would explain the profusion of pointless posts on a newbie forum where you have displayed no real intent on helping a newbie then? ;-)

I'm trying to poke you into moving in the right direction faster, for I fear that your reticence to move forward conceptually will cost you the goodwill of the others who have generously given of their time so greatly.  Yea, thou it seemst as if mine words have fallen upon deaf ears.

« Reply #107 on: September 24, 2010, 10:07 »
0
Locke, I for one have missed you lately

« Reply #108 on: September 24, 2010, 10:21 »
0
That would explain the profusion of pointless posts on a newbie forum where you have displayed no real intent on helping a newbie then? ;-)

I'm trying to poke you into moving in the right direction faster, for I fear that your reticence to move forward conceptually will cost you the goodwill of the others who have generously given of their time so greatly.  Yea, thou it seemst as if mine words have fallen upon deaf ears.

And I am poking you because people will be drawn to the thread to offer their viewpoint just because of the heat from the thread.

Who needs another unanswered post amongst hundreds...

« Reply #109 on: September 24, 2010, 10:41 »
0
Actually, I apologise for deliberately prodding you Sean, it was not appropriate.

Mark

« Reply #110 on: September 24, 2010, 18:32 »
0
Mark, let me offer a suggestion on how to come to understand stock. I do this knowing full well that you won't accept my suggestion, because no one else I've offered this to has taken it up.

One catchphrase that used to be common around the traps is that a stock photographer needs to 'think like a designer'. One way for a non-designer to do this is to engage in battles (Photoshop compositing competitions) in the istock Steel Cage. Once you start trying to put together a photocomposite design, you start to see how all those shadows in the wrong direction, the images that have such strong character that they don't fit with anything else in the design, often the sheer impossibility of finding the right image among millions, etc etc make life so difficult. And sometimes how a single image can inspire a theme. Most importantly no single image works on its own, everything is a part of a larger whole. This is where stock photography is so different from other forms of photography.

« Reply #111 on: September 26, 2010, 05:34 »
0
Mark, let me offer a suggestion on how to come to understand stock. I do this knowing full well that you won't accept my suggestion, because no one else I've offered this to has taken it up.

One catchphrase that used to be common around the traps is that a stock photographer needs to 'think like a designer'. One way for a non-designer to do this is to engage in battles (Photoshop compositing competitions) in the istock Steel Cage. Once you start trying to put together a photocomposite design, you start to see how all those shadows in the wrong direction, the images that have such strong character that they don't fit with anything else in the design, often the sheer impossibility of finding the right image among millions, etc etc make life so difficult. And sometimes how a single image can inspire a theme. Most importantly no single image works on its own, everything is a part of a larger whole. This is where stock photography is so different from other forms of photography.

That is interesting.

You would think then that designers would like a specific type of lighting as standard?

(left lit, right lit etc).

« Reply #112 on: September 26, 2010, 06:11 »
0
Mark, let me offer a suggestion on how to come to understand stock. I do this knowing full well that you won't accept my suggestion, because no one else I've offered this to has taken it up.

One catchphrase that used to be common around the traps is that a stock photographer needs to 'think like a designer'. One way for a non-designer to do this is to engage in battles (Photoshop compositing competitions) in the istock Steel Cage. Once you start trying to put together a photocomposite design, you start to see how all those shadows in the wrong direction, the images that have such strong character that they don't fit with anything else in the design, often the sheer impossibility of finding the right image among millions, etc etc make life so difficult. And sometimes how a single image can inspire a theme. Most importantly no single image works on its own, everything is a part of a larger whole. This is where stock photography is so different from other forms of photography.


That is interesting.

You would think then that designers would like a specific type of lighting as standard?

(left lit, right lit etc).

Left or  right doesn't matter too much, one can always flip an image. Fairly flat lighting is preferred though (think beauty lighting) because it's much easier to paint in shading that isn't there than to remove shading that is there. Check out this battle - they restricted themselves to variations on the one head image (same head for all the designs)
« Last Edit: September 26, 2010, 06:14 by averil »

« Reply #113 on: September 26, 2010, 06:15 »
0
Mark, let me offer a suggestion on how to come to understand stock. I do this knowing full well that you won't accept my suggestion, because no one else I've offered this to has taken it up.

One catchphrase that used to be common around the traps is that a stock photographer needs to 'think like a designer'. One way for a non-designer to do this is to engage in battles (Photoshop compositing competitions) in the istock Steel Cage. Once you start trying to put together a photocomposite design, you start to see how all those shadows in the wrong direction, the images that have such strong character that they don't fit with anything else in the design, often the sheer impossibility of finding the right image among millions, etc etc make life so difficult. And sometimes how a single image can inspire a theme. Most importantly no single image works on its own, everything is a part of a larger whole. This is where stock photography is so different from other forms of photography.


But then if it is flat lighting, then don't you have issues of loss of contrast etc?

Mark :-)
That is interesting.

You would think then that designers would like a specific type of lighting as standard?

(left lit, right lit etc).

Left or  right doesn't matter too much, one can always flip an image. Fairly flat lighting is preferred though (think beauty lighting) because it's much easier to paint in shading that isn't there than to remove shading that is there. Check out this battle - they restricted themselves to variations on the one head image (same head for all the designs)

« Reply #114 on: September 26, 2010, 06:19 »
0
By flat I mean like this rather than, say, Rembrandt lighting.

« Reply #115 on: September 26, 2010, 09:40 »
0
By flat I mean like this rather than, say, Rembrandt lighting.


I had a look at that image.

I could see that they had blown out the background.

Lit from the sides.

Lit from the front on an overhead.

They have in effect lit from 3 angles that allows usage in many different ways.

I think I am grasping your point. :-)

Mark


 

Related Topics

  Subject / Started by Replies Last post
2 Replies
3776 Views
Last post August 25, 2011, 19:18
by deyu16
15 Replies
5608 Views
Last post August 20, 2015, 01:33
by Pauws99
0 Replies
2853 Views
Last post May 20, 2016, 06:41
by suz7
5 Replies
4960 Views
Last post January 29, 2017, 16:59
by Lecaro
1 Replies
1843 Views
Last post September 26, 2023, 04:03
by synthetick

Sponsors

Mega Bundle of 5,900+ Professional Lightroom Presets

Microstock Poll Results

Sponsors