James Lemon
Well-known member
As I looked through the viewfinder he said to me death is coming brother.

As I looked through the viewfinder he said to me death is coming brother.
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Hey James, i'd have a go at 'burning' in his shirt a little...it distracts my eye from his face. I might 'dodge' his face a tad also...
Oh yeah!! That's so much better, now we can engage with this fella's identity so much more, what a difference.![]()
As I looked through the viewfinder he said to me death is coming brother.
![]()
James,
This is the most powerful. Why? It shows the gestures that explain his mission: preaching. It's not about him, it's about salvation.
The edited image becomes less dramatic and bland.
There's a danger in second guessing one's own art. What you do in the first artistic flare of creativity has magic. If it works, let it be!
Wonderful image!
Asher
The original image also makes you put effort into seeing his eyes and his expression; finding it is the reward.
Oh yeah!! That's so much better, now we can engage with this fella's identity so much more, what a difference.![]()
Thank you for that Paul. Can you tell me what you think of this re-edit ?
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Thank you everyone for your feedback. My view is that a the subject is the most important part of an image and deserves as much attention as the photographer can give to it. In this case the subject is the message and not the individual. I have tweaked this just a bit from my last edit and I am happy with this version.
Weird, Robert...I just edited this. I was getting that firefox couldn't find your server, but obviously back now.Although when i first looked at the post, I would have agreed with a treatment like was done based on what Paul has suggested - - - now that I see them side by side, I do agree that it focuses on the person and takes away from the story.
Here's just another take. Not because I feel it is better - - - I just wanted to combine the ideas and see what I could come up with.
This was working with layers and masks in Photoshop
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And then when I uploaded it to my site I ran it through a treatment in my Pixlr online editor
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Robert
Again - just for fun, as I keep being drawn to the original approach of the poster.
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Although when i first looked at the post, I would have agreed with a treatment like was done based on what Paul has suggested - - - now that I see them side by side, I do agree that it focuses on the person and takes away from the story.
Here's just another take. Not because I feel it is better - - - I just wanted to combine the ideas and see what I could come up with.
This was working with layers and masks in Photoshop
![]()
And then when I uploaded it to my site I ran it through a treatment in my Pixlr online editor
![]()
Again - just for fun, as I keep being drawn to the original approach of the poster.
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Weird, Robert...I just edited this. I was getting that firefox couldn't find your server, but obviously back now.
I like what you did Robert, and I agree that after seeing the images with the face lightened side by side, that the impact of what was going on was lost as we looked at his face and were distracted from the story. In your second image, I find that book in his hand seems a little bright.