this post was submitted on 03 Jul 2025
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Photography

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I know I can google this, but I wanted to hear from the people as well. If someone shows you an album and asks your opinion, what would you look for?

My take: I know it is subjective to a degree. I know principles in composition are important But I am not sure I could be part of a discussion on the topic and it would be cool to!

Thanks

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[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 days ago

Sometimes I say that there are "nice photos" and "good photos". A nice photo is usually one which is technically good (focus, sharpness, composition, post processing etc.) and it's pleasant to look at. Properties of good photos are much more difficult to nail down because they often break "rules" intentionally and they're so varied... but they make you feel and/or think.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 4 days ago (1 children)

Photography, like all art, is completely subjective. A good photograph is one that makes you feel something. I don't care much for all those pictures with the perfect compositions but it's the feeling that is important. Extra points for a photograph that delivers the feeling that the photographer intended.

What makes a good photo is that you want to look at it. Or maybe you don't want to look at it but you just have to. Composition can help tell a story but composition does not make the picture.

I really like the photographer Robert Adams, and in particular his book "Skogen". It's filled with nice pictures and very few of them follow many of the common composition "rules".

You like what you like. If someone shows you pictures, just tell them what you like about the pictures.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 3 days ago

Thanks for sharing, I'll have a look at the photographer. You reminded me of a book I i used to have called "that's why it doesn't have to be in focus" or smth which featured quite a few artists need to find it again and see what types of pictures my brain enjoys at first glance. Hm...

[–] [email protected] 6 points 4 days ago (2 children)

I look at focus. Did they opt for wide or narrow apeture. Did they get the focus sharp or did the focus point accidentally fixate on something other than the subject.

I look at composition around the edge of the frame. A random branch or leaf unintentionally breaking the frame. Using something in the foreground intentionally as a frame is different. Crop out the unintentional distraction. Conversely, be aware of ears, hair, arms, hands, legs, feet, (and tails if applicable) getting cut off in the frame. Sometimes that's a legitimate choice, sometimes it looks like an accident. Maybe better to capture the whole being and crop down later.

I look at white balance and color tone to see if it's pleasing to me. This is highly subjective depending on the viewer.

I look for other compositional things like straight horizons, leading lines, rule of thirds. And if those rules were intentionally broken as a style choice or accidental.

I believe learners should try to follow compositional rules. Once you've mastered looking out for those things while minding your exposure time, apeture, ISO, and focus all at the same time when getting your shot, then you will get a feel for when you can break the rules for more impact and it still be a good photo.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 3 days ago

Don't think I'm there yet but I would love to cultivate this type of awareness of the anatomy of a picture. Thanks for sharing.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 4 days ago

I first ponder my initial reaction. Then I try to ponder why I feel that way. Then once I understand those things, I bring in all the things you mentioned to build up the empirical foundation and reasoning for why I feel however I feel.