karolostrivizas 2 Posted November 2, 2009 The well chosen view point Bulent and the specific crop/composition create an excellent abstract synthesis....... Also excellent light treatment and rich grey tonality......………… PS: Many thanks for your kind comment under my recent photo. Link to comment
giuseppe_pasquali 0 Posted November 3, 2009 the composition is really good. The mood is strong, thanks for sharing, ciao, Giuseppe Link to comment
diyarbakir1 0 Posted November 5, 2009 Mükemmel bir kompozisyon ve güzel bir pozlama.. Ellerinize sağlık.. Selamlar.. Link to comment
jeffl7 0 Posted November 11, 2009 This appears to be a sad, yet stalwart scene, a bleak entanglement of responsibility. Link to comment
lliebl 5 Posted November 11, 2009 There are so many connotations to this simple yet stark scene. Very thought provoking. My compliments. Regards, ~~~~~~~~Linda Link to comment
tonmestrom 4 Posted November 14, 2009 "if in barbed wire things can bloom why couldn't I? I will not die, I will not die." Friedl and the Children of Terezin Despite the sad connotations things certainly bloom here. What a terrific photo you've got here Bulent both in respect to content and technically. There is no way you could have done anything better here. Both your composition and your tonality are spot on as is your point of view. It all makes for a powerfull ad convincing photo. Link to comment
celasun 0 Posted November 16, 2009 For your rewarding comments on this photo.It was taken towards the end of a two-day trip. I felt that this was going to be among the few surviving "shots" of those days... Now, it is probably the single one among more than a hundred!We were practically lost as the road signs were invisible because of the heavy fog. About half an hour after deciding to return to our hotel, I noticed this scene and parked the car at the roadside. The fog cleared soon afterwards. I am really happy that you shared my enthusiasm... Ton,I will remember these lines:"If in barbed wire things can bloom why couldn't I? I will not die, I will not die."I did not know the specifics of the Children of Terezin.Now I do...Thank you. Link to comment
timzeipekis 5 Posted November 17, 2009 I love this shot Bulent! Simple in design, but strong and powerful in it's message. Beautiful work! Link to comment
juan-de-santa-anna 0 Posted November 17, 2009 I have to agree with all of the above...and hope to see this hugged in winters' snow filled arms...congrats! juan Link to comment
pnital 36 Posted November 22, 2009 For me it signifies the barbed borders ,its role was stopping freedom. Ton's line touched me deeply. I like the loose form of the fence as if its tight role is already stopped and broken.Simple and a strong message. Link to comment
human images 4 Posted November 25, 2009 from desolate starkness silent elegance in a photograph Link to comment
Jack McRitchie 150 Posted December 3, 2009 I give you the first thought the came to my mind when I saw this picture - World War I and all the destruction and slaughter that madness entailed. Link to comment
nanny 0 Posted December 24, 2009 I agree with most comments, above ! It is a very strong and surrealistic image. Marianne Link to comment
carsten_ranke 0 Posted December 31, 2009 Thought provoking, and -sadly - still valid... Link to comment
LindaM 2 Posted January 27, 2010 Well done. I can only echo what has been said previously. Excellent, Kudos. Link to comment
celasun 0 Posted August 6, 2010 I am really very pleased to see you have all shared my feelings...Small world... ours... Link to comment
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