A few years back, I had a discussion with a forum member at another forum with the screen name AuntiPode. I developed a way to judge landscapes from that interchange as follow, starting with re quote.
To quote AuntiPode:
“Great images have a gestalt that is greater than the sum of their parts. I rate subject and composition as the two most important aspects of an image. Subject is what it intends to say and composition is the structure to say”
Critique of a landscape.
Visual impact is what grabs our attention at first glance. This could be the typical stuff, bright colors, a sunset, cloud formation crashing wave etc. But some images are subtle and have no immediate impact and must be viewed closer. Some subtle images are very good, but the first impact is still important for popular appeal. A wow image that does not pass closer inspection will at least get a first glance while a subtle one that is great up close may be passed by. But when it is our job to judge, this does not matter because we must judge all images and get past this point.
Image quality. Once your attention has been drawn to the image, you ask these questions:
Note, this is a landscape, not an abstract or portrait or close up or altered reality. When affects appropriate to other venues are applied, it changes venue.
1. Is the color/saturation believable?
2. Is the exposure and tonal range believable?
3. Is it sharp and in focus?
4. Halos, gritty look, over sharpened?
5. Is the contrast good?
6. Does it seem to have a true black and true white?
7. Obvious cloning, dodging or burning.
8. Dust spots or other artifacts that should have been cleaned up.
9. Vignette that is not intentional. Ignore if intentional.
10. Subject motion. Ok for water, not much else.
11. Is it clean? It should look like it was taken through a clear glass window.
12. Is there distortion? Leaning trees?
Composition:
1. Are all the elements pleasing or seem like they belong?
2. Is there some single element that is more important than the rest?
3. If so, is it made to be prominent?
4. Are there elements that ought not to be in the image?
5. Could they be eliminated by viewing angle or cropping?
6. Does this look the way you might expect to view the scene in person?
7. Is the scene itself something worth looking at?
8. How soon would you tire of this if it were a print or a screensaver?
9. Does the composition give it a strong and coherent message?
10. Is the composition balanced?
Intrinsic value. This is how the image works for you in spite of the other factors or the sum of the parts in Aunti’s words.
1. Does the image speak to the emotions.
2. Is this a great image?
3. How does it rank on a greatness range?
4. If it is being judged in a contest, where does it rank with respect to the other images?
5. If not in a contest, how does it stack up relative to images you have seen?
Weight.
1. Image quality is a litmus test at least for judges because it flunks if insufficient.
2. Intrinsic value moves to first if image quality is sufficient.
3. Impact is 3d in importance to me if not the general public.
4. Composition is probably like image quality, if it does not work, the image will have less intrinsic value.
Here is my thinking.
No matter how much impact an image has, if the image quality is poor, it is a poor image. Image quality does not matter for something of historical significance, but landscapes are usually not historically important. And one with poor image quality is of low value.
Intrinsic value is a macro judgment, one that transcends all other items while being a composite of them at the same time. Being a combination of them all it is not easy to dissect. It comes from the heart not the mind and is not so easy to analyze.
Composition is one of those things that I know after the fact, but cannot define. I prefer to include it into the intrinsic value area. For some, composition can be analyzed, but to me it can only be described in some generalized way and is part of the art.
A high impact image with average image quality has less value to me than a subtle image with better image quality. In fact a subtle image really needs the image quality to shine because often it’s the fine details that make it stand apart, like the fine texture and accurate color of an old tree for example.
Subject value and image quality are both more important to me than composition. Extraneous things will cause a lower judgment, but I don’t need to be guided. My composition check list does not include stuff like leading lines and rule of thirds. If the scene is homogenous and interesting and looks like a place I might stop and look at in person, it is pretty close to meeting my composition rules.
To quote AuntiPode:
“Great images have a gestalt that is greater than the sum of their parts. I rate subject and composition as the two most important aspects of an image. Subject is what it intends to say and composition is the structure to say”
Critique of a landscape.
Visual impact is what grabs our attention at first glance. This could be the typical stuff, bright colors, a sunset, cloud formation crashing wave etc. But some images are subtle and have no immediate impact and must be viewed closer. Some subtle images are very good, but the first impact is still important for popular appeal. A wow image that does not pass closer inspection will at least get a first glance while a subtle one that is great up close may be passed by. But when it is our job to judge, this does not matter because we must judge all images and get past this point.
Image quality. Once your attention has been drawn to the image, you ask these questions:
Note, this is a landscape, not an abstract or portrait or close up or altered reality. When affects appropriate to other venues are applied, it changes venue.
1. Is the color/saturation believable?
2. Is the exposure and tonal range believable?
3. Is it sharp and in focus?
4. Halos, gritty look, over sharpened?
5. Is the contrast good?
6. Does it seem to have a true black and true white?
7. Obvious cloning, dodging or burning.
8. Dust spots or other artifacts that should have been cleaned up.
9. Vignette that is not intentional. Ignore if intentional.
10. Subject motion. Ok for water, not much else.
11. Is it clean? It should look like it was taken through a clear glass window.
12. Is there distortion? Leaning trees?
Composition:
1. Are all the elements pleasing or seem like they belong?
2. Is there some single element that is more important than the rest?
3. If so, is it made to be prominent?
4. Are there elements that ought not to be in the image?
5. Could they be eliminated by viewing angle or cropping?
6. Does this look the way you might expect to view the scene in person?
7. Is the scene itself something worth looking at?
8. How soon would you tire of this if it were a print or a screensaver?
9. Does the composition give it a strong and coherent message?
10. Is the composition balanced?
Intrinsic value. This is how the image works for you in spite of the other factors or the sum of the parts in Aunti’s words.
1. Does the image speak to the emotions.
2. Is this a great image?
3. How does it rank on a greatness range?
4. If it is being judged in a contest, where does it rank with respect to the other images?
5. If not in a contest, how does it stack up relative to images you have seen?
Weight.
1. Image quality is a litmus test at least for judges because it flunks if insufficient.
2. Intrinsic value moves to first if image quality is sufficient.
3. Impact is 3d in importance to me if not the general public.
4. Composition is probably like image quality, if it does not work, the image will have less intrinsic value.
Here is my thinking.
No matter how much impact an image has, if the image quality is poor, it is a poor image. Image quality does not matter for something of historical significance, but landscapes are usually not historically important. And one with poor image quality is of low value.
Intrinsic value is a macro judgment, one that transcends all other items while being a composite of them at the same time. Being a combination of them all it is not easy to dissect. It comes from the heart not the mind and is not so easy to analyze.
Composition is one of those things that I know after the fact, but cannot define. I prefer to include it into the intrinsic value area. For some, composition can be analyzed, but to me it can only be described in some generalized way and is part of the art.
A high impact image with average image quality has less value to me than a subtle image with better image quality. In fact a subtle image really needs the image quality to shine because often it’s the fine details that make it stand apart, like the fine texture and accurate color of an old tree for example.
Subject value and image quality are both more important to me than composition. Extraneous things will cause a lower judgment, but I don’t need to be guided. My composition check list does not include stuff like leading lines and rule of thirds. If the scene is homogenous and interesting and looks like a place I might stop and look at in person, it is pretty close to meeting my composition rules.