giuseppe_pasquali 0 Posted September 11, 2008 Thank you for your comments, critiques and suggestions, G. Please, view it larger, thank you Link to comment
Gianluigi Albanese 73 Posted September 11, 2008 Bella foto, hai fermato l'attimo. Anche l'uso del BN mi sembra adatto. Link to comment
diego bardone 0 Posted September 11, 2008 Bellissima: il mosso, l'espressione dell'uomo al telefono, il sacchetto, la via di fuga...è un piacere osservare le tue foto. Ciao! Link to comment
havana 0 Posted September 11, 2008 Nell'era "senza fili" questa è un'immagine recuperata dalla memoria. Di grande impatto. ciao! Link to comment
dionysos 0 Posted September 11, 2008 Good framing, composition and effective use of shutter speed. Regards. Link to comment
ritachi 0 Posted September 11, 2008 Che dire? Mi piace anche questa, bel contrasto tra l'immobilità e il movimento e gli stili così diversi dei due soggetti. Ottima foto. Ciao. Link to comment
Jack McRitchie 150 Posted September 11, 2008 Very interesting in the contrasting use of space (the shallow linear quality of the foreground as opposed to the angling depth of the side street on the right) and motion (the blurred form of the pedestrian against the static clarity of the man on the phone). Link to comment
pnital 36 Posted September 12, 2008 Giuseppe, this is a very nice camera use...movement vs. stabe l like the crop that show the surrounding. nice as well is the B/W conversion, which is very compatible for the scene! Link to comment
lizweisiger 0 Posted September 12, 2008 Wonderful capture. (The title is great.) I like how each man is positioned, and of course, I love the BW. Link to comment
acarodp 0 Posted September 13, 2008 Very well done in catching the contrast between the movement of the couple, and the still man. And of course, his expression is a big plus. The couple part is particularly effective since the blur is not excessive and the eye can stop on the hand (I find that these details are often important). I was wondering whether it could take some crop on the right, but finally I think not, it would come out unbalanced. L. Link to comment
giuseppe_pasquali 0 Posted September 15, 2008 your comments are really welcome: you always help me to achieve a better understanding (more reasoned than emotive) of my works. I remember that while photographing this man (who I imagined was calling "chez") I saw with the left eye (the right was ocupied with the viewfinder) the couple approaching from the left and had a flash: two couples, one blurred, and the other one "splitted" on the two distant ends of the telephone wire. I reduced the shutter speed and shot. Sometimes it's better to have both eyes wide open. Thank you for your incredible support and for all the time you spend on my work, Giuseppe Link to comment
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