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kiwi
09-05-2011, 12:45pm
Is it light, composition, technical challenge, colour, a decisive moment, impact, newsworthiness?


What makes a great photo in your view ?

ricktas
09-05-2011, 1:01pm
Can I say all of the above? For me it depends on the photo. A truly stunning landscape shot can grab my attention for its visual appeal. Where a grainy black and white journalistic photo can equally grab me because of the relevance of the content of the photo. Each photo can have its own appeal on differing levels and for differing reasons. I might see a photo of an elderly lady as well taken because of the lighting and eye contact, whereas the next person to view it might get an emotional connection cause it is a photo of their grandmother. We both see the same photo as being great, but for differing reasons.

Therein lies the benefits and limitations of critiquing, it is a personal thing and no-one can tell us what we see or feel from a photo is wrong, because of that individual appeal that might be overlooked by others.

Interesting topic, looking forward to where this one leads

snappysi
09-05-2011, 1:32pm
Kiwi, i think that a good photo has mostly all of the elements that you mentioned going for it and "followuing the rules" as it were. However for me a "truely great" photo can break all the rules, have relatively poor light, and be technically flawed, but if it grabs you on some emotional level it will always be a winner. Landscape shots for example can make you feel like you are there, or make you want to go there yourself, to do that thery don neseccarily need to be technically good, just convey something that strikles a chord within the viewer.
As Rick mentioned above, this is one of the reasons why critiquing can be subjective. I could see a "poor" picture and have it speak to me on a emotional level where as the same shots could in your eyes just be flawed. Doesnt make any ones thinking wrong, just different.
One of the things i love about photography on the whole...... great topic.

Simon.

PH005
09-05-2011, 1:50pm
A Great photo to me is one that cannot be exactly copied by anyone else. Unique to the photographer. Something that makes you say, " Wow, I wish I was there to see that ". One that you know has taken the photographer a lot of time, skill and effort to achieve. Then there is the luck factor. Right place, right time, right camera setting for that " great " shot. Greatness as well as beauty is definately in the eye of the beholder. As has been already stated, One mans treasure is another mans junk. To be truely Great though, I feel that the image should be straight from the camera, before any PP. In my opinion that is true greatness.

ricstew
09-05-2011, 1:58pm
A great photo is one that makes you feel.........something.......whatever that feeling may be :)

Ms Monny
09-05-2011, 1:59pm
A great photo can be technically perfect but it can also be flawed in all the areas you mentioned but it has that emotional connection. I try to vote, in the competitions, on photos that are different and make me want to look more because most of the photos are ALL fantastic technically. I have seen some exhibitions where the photos are not what I would have thought to be amazing, but they were 'different' and techinically perfect in terms of exposure, light, composition.

To sum that up - emotion and difference draws me in to a great photo....something that makes me want to pull up a chair and just stare at the image!!

Bax
09-05-2011, 2:52pm
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

I know that I can take a technically flawless, theoretically correct image - only to have 95% of people say it's terrible. Then I can turn around and show them a rejected shot, slightly OOF and underexposed and they will love it.

Personally, I look for a pleasing image to the eye, composition and colours. Followed secondly by the technical aspect of it, surprisingly emotion and story come in last for me.

neil70
09-05-2011, 3:02pm
to me a great photo is one that makes a connection to the viewer. It jumps out and tells a story. One that is technically correct is not always a great shot if has no connection.

kiwi
09-05-2011, 3:57pm
I think some of the great shots of the past have significant technical flaws....so....it can't be that, but yet we are seemingly obsessed with pixel peeping and new better gear...interesting isn't it

PH005
09-05-2011, 5:04pm
In this day and age Kiwi it is hard to tell if what you are looking at is what came out of the camera, or , what is the result of hours in front of a computer. We are becoming slaves of technology.
Maybe AP should run a competition that is PP free ?

kiwi
09-05-2011, 5:18pm
I'm not sure why you have an issue with PP, it's always been part of photography and still is. You might as well ban all Jpeg images as they are all processed too according to individual preferences.

I don't agree at all with the OOC is pure brigade really. In saying this I typically loathe poorly conceived and executed post processing in all forms

Digital art is really just another form of painting and should be discussed separately

William
09-05-2011, 5:31pm
In this day and age Kiwi it is hard to tell if what you are looking at is what came out of the camera, or , what is the result of hours in front of a computer. We are becoming slaves of technology.
Maybe AP should run a competition that is PP free ?

That would be based on honesty, Because no one can tell if PP was applied , The big word is "Subjective" , If I like it . It's a good shot , Bugger all the WhoHa about whats right and whats wrong , If you like the image in your eyes It's good IMO - Bill :th3:

Kym
09-05-2011, 5:38pm
A great image has to grab me emotionally first and foremost. Technical elements come 2nd.
The elements you describe generally need to work together for an image to sing.

That said, glaring technical problems also put me off, eg. horizons not level, blown highlights, etc.

Per our conversion last night, Henri Cartier-Bresson's Behind the Gare St. Lazare does not do it for me at all, (checks that flame proof suit is on),
where Steve McCurry's Afghan Girl to me is totally brilliant.

Bear Dale
09-05-2011, 5:42pm
What makes a great photo ?

Anything.

kiwi
09-05-2011, 5:45pm
Yes, although I also think that when the photo was taken and the equipment then available has a impact on the technical aspects

Bear Dale
09-05-2011, 5:53pm
I have a single photo of my Grandfather in his Light Horseman uniform taken just before being shipped out to England. I wouldn't trade that for any other photo. So sometimes it can just be the content.


Don't we all have a grainy, out of focus shot of a loved one that is no longer with us? Today it wouldn't make the cut and you'd delete it without a second thought. But how valuable is that grainy, out of focus shot of the loved one that is no longer with you?

William
09-05-2011, 6:43pm
You mean one like this Jim, A photo of my Dad just before leaving for Europe WW11 , For Bomber training as a Mid Upper/ Tail Gunner in Halifaxes and Langcaster Bombers across the Atlantic , He was 18 , Still with us at 88 , I treasure this one , I think It's a great old Portrait , And It was'nt DSLR

kiwi
09-05-2011, 7:43pm
I think historical family photographic records are important for sure

But are they great photographs ? Not necessarily in their own right

I think a great photo is one that tells a story simply.

William
09-05-2011, 7:59pm
Thanks Darren , As Kym said a photo that grabs you emotionally , Well after finding this one , And posting it , I broke down and have been in tears for the last hour , I guess just knowing what he went through and the innocence on his face at 18 !!

Bear Dale
09-05-2011, 8:10pm
You mean one like this Jim, A photo of my Dad just before leaving for Europe WW11 , For Bomber training as a Mid Upper/ Tail Gunner in Halifaxes and Langcaster Bombers across the Atlantic , He was 18 , Still with us at 88 , I treasure this one , I think It's a great old Portrait , And It was'nt DSLR

Terrific photo William.

kiwi
09-05-2011, 8:13pm
Thanks Darren , As Kym said a photo that grabs you emotionally , Well after finding this one , And posting it , I broke down and have been in tears for the last hour , I guess just knowing what he went through and the innocence on his face at 18 !!

The story makes the photo, thanks for sharing your pride and emotion, and Jim, I hope you have that photo of yours digitally stored and backed up for posterity also

bobt
09-05-2011, 9:07pm
In my view a good photo has to create an emotional response in the viwer that is not apathy, boredom or disinterest. Interestingly, I just wrote a piece in our club newletter that referenced this sort of thing. I recently visited a local gallery and was struck with the thought that much of the photography presented lacked that essential element.

I am afraid there is a lot of photography (and art) which relies on the pedigree of the author as much as genuine artistic merit. The fact that the maker is a credentialled "artist" is often enough to earn a lack lustre image a place in galleries. People seem reluctant to discount any work of a recognised "talent" simply becuase it is assumed that because that person created it then it must be art by definition. There seems to be a reluctance to accept that even professionals can create rubbish.

Unfortunately, to me this tends to devalue the definition of what is truly artistic. I feel each work should be judged on merit rather than by the company it keeps.

PH005
09-05-2011, 9:47pm
I'm not sure why you have an issue with PP, it's always been part of photography and still is. You might as well ban all Jpeg images as they are all processed too according to individual preferences.

I don't agree at all with the OOC is pure brigade really. In saying this I typically loathe poorly conceived and executed post processing in all forms

Digital art is really just another form of painting and should be discussed separately

No issue with PP at all.

kiwi
10-05-2011, 7:59am
That's good to hear :-)

To add a bit to the discussion, perhaps take away the personal element of a personal photo. So, yes, every photo I have of my family is great for me but blah for the general population

neil70
13-05-2011, 11:00pm
like the majority of wedding photos, there are the usual dozen that people will say are great shots and then the rest just mean something to the couple as a record of great day(hopefully). I have an out of focus motion blurred photo i took at a super x race that myself and my boys love, the colours just all blend together, it is the only piece of "art" we have in the house.

Wayno
25-05-2011, 1:08pm
A good photo can evoke good memories. For a great photo you will always want to keep looking at it.

ving
25-05-2011, 1:17pm
can i say none of the above?

...yeah sure i can.

photography is an emotive thing. those that have the greater emotive value are the best.
I have seen shots of all types that are perfectly exposed, sharp (or soft) and well composed that have left me feeling well... a bit ho hum. I have seen others that lack any really technical qualities at all that excite me on an emotional level and that is what i am more likely to be attracted too.

BecM
26-05-2011, 12:53pm
Thanks Darren , As Kym said a photo that grabs you emotionally , Well after finding this one , And posting it , I broke down and have been in tears for the last hour , I guess just knowing what he went through and the innocence on his face at 18 !!

William I have a photo of my father's grandparents, their 6 children and many, many grandchildren. It was taken shortly before my father, his sister and his parents escaped to Australia, just about every single person in that photo was eventually killed in concentration camps. It is for me the most powerful photo I have ever seen.

For me a good photo is a photo that evokes a strong emotion. I prefer that emotion to be a nice one though :)