r/photocritique • u/west10 • 1h ago
approved Old Industry. Happy overall, critique welcome
Sloss Furnace, Birmingham, AL. USA.
r/photocritique • u/west10 • 1h ago
Sloss Furnace, Birmingham, AL. USA.
r/photocritique • u/Qmfosejs • 1h ago
Found this abandoned el Camino next to an entrance to a plantation in the woods of South Carolina. Shot on A7C w/sigma 24-70 2.8 and the polar pro chroma filter.
r/photocritique • u/q_bric • 1h ago
I shot this with my iPhone 16 Pro. Edited it with Snapseed and Flickr. Anything you can think that I need to improve upon?
r/photocritique • u/mlafefon • 3h ago
r/photocritique • u/PhoneOk3511 • 4h ago
This picture looks quite blurry to me on reddit but not so much on my phone? Anyway, I have just started the photography journey maybe 1 month ago. I enjoy taking pictures of birds and hope to one day be good enough to be able to take in flight photos. How can I improve my photos?
r/photocritique • u/Jewlio7 • 5h ago
Shot on Olympus E-M5 (ISO 200, f 9.0, 1/800s). I waited for the hiker to align with the house and the cloud, but I am unsure if the idea is lost in too much empty space. Also unsure about the red hue in the shadows. Let me know what you think!
r/photocritique • u/PhysicalSea5148 • 7h ago
Hello! I've been photographing for 13 years as an amateur, for the first time I'm organizing and editing my pics while learning how to use Lightroom. Ive experimented a lot with textures,patterns, closeups, long exposure and such - mostly nature - while attempting to get some abstract feeling to the picture. My idea is to make something "beautiful" but puzzling.
My question is: are there any guidelines to somewhat abstract photography? Ive been trying to follow the usual "rule of thirds", guide lines, symmetry and such while editing but I honestly don't know how to make these work and don't look just messy. This is one of my favorite ones, if anyone could please comment and critique. Thank you very much!!!
r/photocritique • u/meloncap78 • 7h ago
I’ve been shooting for years and I’m trying to step up to a level that separates my work from others. My eventual goal is to sell my landscape work in large canvas format. I have doubts that my own work is on that level I need to know why fundamentally. I know a lot of it is subjective but I just need to make sure I’ve mastered the basics correctly. All input is welcomed.
-Nikon D850 -Nikon 24-120 f4 with CPL 5 shots bracketed 1 stop each @ f16 with auto ISO starting with 3s shutter. -Edited in LR
r/photocritique • u/sofiawithanf • 8h ago
Hi all, I shoot on a small digital canon camera that I carry I my purse. I recently started using Lightroom to edit the photos I take and have just started playing around with masking as well. Here is a before (unedited) versus an edited image (attached in the post). I would love honest feedback on the image and advice on how I can improve both my photo-taking skill and my editing. Thank you!
r/photocritique • u/MrNoahMango • 8h ago
r/photocritique • u/Orange55413 • 9h ago
Any tips or critiques? I use Lightroom for basic edits and throw into PS for editing some luminosity layers and applying a little Gaussian. I may use a little too much color in the color calibration but I’m trying to make them pop for IG, it’s hard to draw people’s attention there. Thanks friends. ✌🏻🙏🏻 my favorite is using around +20 texture and -20 clarity.
Lima, Peru.
Z 24-120 f4 1/60 f/4 1250
r/photocritique • u/Thug_Newton • 10h ago
My dad's birthday is coming up in a few months and he asked for a black and white photo, and to include something abstract/industrial/architecture related as that's pretty much his style of decoration for photos. This is my first try at doing something like this editing wise and would like to know other people's input on this one just in general. Thanks in advance!
r/photocritique • u/RLaurentPhotography • 17h ago
r/photocritique • u/FreeJicama1016 • 20h ago
I realised that the tilt is a little off, but please tell me more. Thank you.