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where children sleeps - the wall


andrea-de-bonis

Exposure Date: 2010:12:05 16:09:42;
Make: NIKON CORPORATION;
Model: NIKON D200;
Exposure Time: 1/30.0 seconds s;
FNumber: f/2.0;
ISOSpeedRatings: ISO 200;
ExposureProgram: Other;
ExposureBiasValue: 0
MeteringMode: Other;
Flash: Flash did not fire;
FocalLength: 50.0 mm mm;
FocalLengthIn35mmFilm: 75 mm;
Software: Adobe Photoshop CS3 Macintosh;


From the category:

Street

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  • 124,944 images
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a very shocking exibition. james mollison shooted, all around the world,

portriats of children and photos of the places (not always a room) where

they sleeps. all photos are also collected in a book.

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The content of this sense and the way you managed to bring them all out in such a remarkable exposed manner. makes this image a very greet story telling and with a unique atmosphere, the b/w is the wise choice here and the high quality of contrast and tone do add to the well thought off composition.

Thank you for sharing it my friend and wishing you all of the best.

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certainly a really interesting experience must be to see the exhibition, not only for photographers I think, found some images from the book on the Net which strike as an original idea, food for thought but also worth seeing for their Benetton-like colors.

Like the strong post processing and clear composition here, the b&w version seems like a bit of your interpretation of the event and makes this shot more than just a documentary. Thanks for sharing, best regards.

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Andrea, I like the way you present this with the focus being on the exhibit and the spectator being a smaller, but integral part of the composition. I'm certain it was a very moving experience, the images I have found certainly are. Thank you for bringing this person to my attention.

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Ciao Andrea, interessantissima mostra anche se emotivamente molto forte ( come solo la realtà lo sa essere ... purtroppo), meraviglioso il modo in cui hai raccolto in un fotogramma le emozioni che la mostra intende trasmettere, il tutto in uno splendido b&w, complimenti! Un carissimo saluto
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A well crafted, crisp documentary photo where the woman wearing all dark clothing is not distracting, and her position is fine letting the main subjects stand out - but otherwise nothing fantastic as such (on my scale anyway).

As off-topic I see the photos were hang quite high on the wall: the viewer have to look upwards and thus risk to see reflections of the spotlights on the surface, may it be a photo itself or a protecting glass. Andrea, how did you experience the light condition while looking at those portraits, maybe at the same distance as the woman?

PS Better late than never: I wish you all the best for this new year wiht lot of creativity and photos to share with us.

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Caro Andrea, la tua "sofisticatezza"d'immagine cresce sempre di più e me ne rallegro, ci offri sempre gemme preziose! Ciao, Maurizio!

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Hi dear Andrea,

This is a great b&w shot with fine view and very well view point!

Thnx for taking and sharing.

Best regards(Bobby).

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Certainly a very touching subject, sensitively handled. The composition and post-production have been top-notch. In fact one can feel how much the lady is drawn into the photo of the child she's viewing; and in the process, draws the viewer into the shot. Regards.

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let me say thanks to you, all togheter, for all tour attention and time. unfortunately i didnt find time to answer to ll your interesting observations. ciao!

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