Judges Comments |
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| Comment left by Gordon on the Friday, May 4, 2012 at 07:37 |
| I always like the drama of a shark picture. Given that you were at a shallow depth the lighting is good...although I'd encourage you to try and use manual settings to freeze the image. If you have shutter priority then I'd use it. Setting wise I'd look at 1/160 of a second then bump up your iso if the picture is too dark. You can consider making minor adjustments using EV +-. From a composition perspective you should try and single out one shark and make it the focus of the picture. |
| Comment left by Fiona on the Friday, April 27, 2012 at 11:45 |
| nice one. I love the fact that your main point of focus in focus and clear and the other fish are all moving. Makes for a great shot. My eye was immediately drawn to the one shark and that is the right thing to do to avoid a photo like this becoming too messy. I like the dark and gloomy feel of the photo.. I think it goes really well with the subject matter. |
| Comment left by Andrew on the Wednesday, April 25, 2012 at 22:03 |
| Shark diving photos are never easy to get right . If the intention is to show a divers experience then it translates well , ways of improving this would have been to try and isolate a single shark more clearly to provide a focal point for the viewer and often a diver can set the scene for comparison of the size of the sharks. Added light could also increase the colour and contrast of the image . |
| Comment left by Peter on the Wednesday, April 25, 2012 at 15:42 |
| I like this image, lots of movement and one can almost feel the frenzy with the fish and sharks in the water, post process tweaking with contrast and slight sharpening might have yielded a slightly more dramatic image. |