finally, time snatched to comment on the cards in to date
Jake Williams – Plum pudding – I like the effective use of the shallow depth of field. The dim light, to capture the flame, allows you to cast the tea cup out of focus – but we still know what the cup is, and it sets the context for the balance of the image. Oh, and the memories of Grandma putting her home made steamed plum pudding on the table, or some years a carrot and raisin pudding instead. Then Grandpa would sally forth with the brandy, liberally douse the warm pudding on the plate, and then he would use the paper pull bit left over from the Christmas crackers, and transfer the flame from one of the candles that were always burning in a table centre piece of some sort to the pudding. Your image really takes me back.
Mark Fisher – County fair – Great abstraction I like the great contrast range, and sparse use of greys. My wife commented – ‘like a Warhol a bit isn’t it’
Warren Hinder – Eucalypts canopy on the waters edge – I love the deep brooding feeling the dark tone lower undergrowth give to the frame. Hats off to you for finding the still water to frame the reflection so well also.
Hal9000 – Leaves photogram. – A great range of tones; I usually just get whites and blacks with my photogram efforts. I not sure if you made this arrangement fixed by ironing the leaves to wax paper first or not. If not, then there would be a unique arrangement for each print, and I love that idea as well. The sugar maple leaf I easily identify with; I have been raking the things up and bagging them on almost every dry day I could find for the last 3 weeks.
John King – wow- what a subject – I love it.
Lillian Sly – Heads gardener- a very nice scan and inkjet print. I like how the saturation of colours captured by the original slide still echo well in this derived print.
Darwin – foggy trees – a very nice low key image. Great that you can pull such an image out of an overcast day; I wish I could – usually I see a day like this and think – good thing this is a work day, and not the weekend.
Buster – the true pal- He looks to be stirring from a nap taken on the back step, and has the same look that my kids give me when I am about to make an exposure – as if to say – oh dad, not another picture. Nice use of sharpness and a range of tones.
Tim Grey – Pigeon puddle – There must be too much latent CSI in my brain, because, like others, I saw this first as a pool of blood, with spatters. – the title set me straight.