Wow, that last one is a knockout, Wayne. The central placement of the
white tree is brilliant.
Why would you reject it? And what does it mean when you reject it?
Hang it in a dark corner or throw the image file into the recycle bin/
trash?
I realized long ago that even if I had any talent and spent a lot of
time in self promotion, the chances of someone sucking in their
breath with one of my photos 50 years from now is pretty slim. More
likely is a mass die off with starving people gasping for breath. Old
photographs by one of the previous 6 billion people will be low on
the priority list. I just try to enjoy myself. For me it is a reason
to look at the world around me. I had started to get stale when
digital came along and, boy, has that been fun. But we change. If
photography no longer does it for you, pack the camera away and open
a tattoo parlor, or whatever floats your boat. None of us are going
to be posthumously famous.
Winsor
Long Beach, California, USA
On Apr 26, 2006, at 6:41 PM, Wayne S wrote:
> With the saturation from the internet, photos that may have some
> real lasting power, some real creative insight, or hold long term
> interest, tend to get lost with the short attention span the
> internet seems to induce. Not to mention our current lifestyle.
>
> WayneS - always seeking to make the most enlightened photo ever
>
> recent rejects:
> http://www.zuik.net/om/reject_MG_3342.jpg
> http://www.zuik.net/om/reject_MG_3356.jpg
> http://www.zuik.net/om/reject_MG_3399.jpg
> http://www.zuik.net/om/reject_MG_3672.jpg
>
>
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