The top one with the thin black lines works for me.
Roger
Agree with Roger. The black lines seem to be less obtrusive - my subjective view. Ken, thanks for the explanation + earlier post.
Les
That one time Jasper Johns visited Moscow, ID...
Nikon FM / Nikkor 50mm f/2 / Tri-X 400 dev. in Xtol
David
Comments and critique always welcome.
My mom loves birds - she breeds various exotic parrots and enjoys birdwatching. She visited this past weekend and helped me choose some nice bird feeders for our back deck to go with our hummingbird feeders.
Been watching them this week and got a couple decent photos of a titmouse (titmice?). Taken with my D800E and Sigma 300mm f/2.8:
You make an excellent point !
According to Wikipedia even the 16th century Tohaku screens measure 156.8 by 356 centimetres (61.7 in × 140.2 in) or around 5 x 12 feet... and the actual work consists of 2 screens !
Until a well-funded patron steps forward with a commission I think I will put this approach aside
I like those Ken, particularly with the white dividers. It's the same scene as a wide photo of course, but the composition changes as you divide it up because I'm looking at a series of compositions instead of one.
Also reminds me of Koichiro Kurita who has exhibited locally and I followed with interest because of him being inspired by Thoreau.
These are probably 8x10 negatives photographed sequentially and contact printed as a group. He's big into the handmade thing but I'm open to various methods of printing.
http://koichirokurita.com/beyond-spheres#/i/4
http://koichirokurita.com/beyond-spheres
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