Catherine and her two children were feeding the birds at Centennial Park together with Catherine's sister who was visiting from Brissie. The boy dropped his small, pressed-tin bi-plane into the putrid waters and I retrieved it with the head of Dad's walking stick - I felt a bit like Albert wi' lion. With Catherine's agreement, I had been trying to photograph the group from the left, but it was immensely cluttered. After the sister choofed off to wash said plane - followed by one distraught lad - the scene opened up from the right.
Sunday, March 1, 2009
Julie (50/100) - The missing demographic
Catherine and her two children were feeding the birds at Centennial Park together with Catherine's sister who was visiting from Brissie. The boy dropped his small, pressed-tin bi-plane into the putrid waters and I retrieved it with the head of Dad's walking stick - I felt a bit like Albert wi' lion. With Catherine's agreement, I had been trying to photograph the group from the left, but it was immensely cluttered. After the sister choofed off to wash said plane - followed by one distraught lad - the scene opened up from the right.
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5 comments:
I really like the one you've chosen. (perhaps crop out the green fence or bench at the very right) The mother's body leaning forward and her arm draws you across to the girl.
That's the sort of composition I've been working on (with varying success), horizontal with the subject to one side.
Wouldn't 2 steps to the right put you in the water?
I like this one. Don't hats make people look more interesting. In some way's its a shame we gave them up (other than sun hats).
Wouldn't 2 steps to the right put you in the water?
Pea brains don't compute that sort of thing till it's too late!
I like it too.
Certainly not red-headed pea-brains!
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