A good and interesting photograph is dependent upon a number of things. How is the lighting? What quality is the image? How has it been artistically edited? You can take a very simple photograph and make it an amazing piece of art by manipulation of the lighting, camera angle, blur effects, and a number of other things. I would suggest working with what is best for you, explore your opportunities. See what makes you excited, and you can bet that it will make other people feel the same.
New York City can be really cool to photograph but if you want more of a small town/ nature feel you should go to Skaneateles NY. It is close to Syracuse and very pretty!!!! That is one place, another one is good old Central Park. There are always plenty of fun things/people to photograph there. Good Luck!
I don't think it's possible to make a drawing look like a photograph unless you're a very good artist
One or more subjects and a setting that concentrates the viewer's interaction on the subjects, not the background or other distractions. A formal, stuffy pose need not be part of the equation.
It means a photograph with ur signature on it..............
don't be lazy actually read it and you will learn something.
contrast
contrast
New York City can be really cool to photograph but if you want more of a small town/ nature feel you should go to Skaneateles NY. It is close to Syracuse and very pretty!!!! That is one place, another one is good old Central Park. There are always plenty of fun things/people to photograph there. Good Luck!
Interesting but totally untestable.
define public and perivite good?
Curioisity is the desire of the scientist to study an interesting phenomenon
Interests are subjective. What one person may find interesting another may consider trivial. You would need to define your interests before anyone could tell you facts that you may find interesting.
It could be called a number of things. "A good photograph" would be the most common one. "Luck" might be used in the case of someone who doesn't have particularly high skills in photography.
I don't think it's possible to make a drawing look like a photograph unless you're a very good artist
Learning to use foregrounds in our photographs is tricky because we tend to focus on the subject of our photograph and forget about everything else. When we are learning about foregrounds, one of two things often happens. The first thing is we may ignore objects in the foreground if they are distracting or if they don't contribute to the story of the photograph.If we don't have that problem, the second possible problem is that we have foreground space in the photograph, but there's nothing there. For example, think about the Grant photograph above. Imagine what it would look like if there was a field where the river and shrubs are. The photograph would lack some of the interest and drama that it has now. It might still be a good photograph, but including an interesting foreground makes the image better.
Good.
Something that is not good