Quote from Donna_137698 on Feb 11th, 2012, 3:11am:Quote from Penny_134243 on Feb 10th, 2012, 7:00pm:Greetings!
I just have say that I like the phrase, "our hand-picked community of artists." It sounds ever so much better than, "a random bunch of people who like to be artsy."
My 2-cents, for what it's worth.
Penny
Fly in the ointment again LOL but hand-picked on what grounds? Being accomplished artists in other venues because I'm not one of them. This all is making me very nervous because I am not a papered seasoned accomplished artist by any means - I've never won a contest outside of my 3D model horse work - my photographs have only been seen locally, outside of my efforts with GCU - I've entered one online photo contest and my only submission didn't even get a glance. So, please see where I am most concerned that what I lack will come back to bite me some day.
Mindy, I've quoted my questions again in this thread. Leaning Tower of Pisa question with a definitely crooked building and my other latest in regards to someone else using creative filters to convey a certain feeling to coincide with her sentiment. Again, not trying to be a pain but to show I am the student looking to learn. Maybe to you the same questions are coming up but my feeling is that if they are then proper clear answers haven't been given. I do read all threads as best as I can and take note of any such discussions and plug into my memory banks all that I can as I look into striving for that higher bar - I do hope you will bear with me - as always, I don't mean to be disrespectful or problematic - I happen to agree with Doreen in saying I'm on this long journey - just looking for the right crumbs of bread to follow to find success in the end.
As for the
- it does say "eye roll" when you roll over it LOL and yeah, misconstrued because it's taken to me as "she's at it again" or as a gesture of disrespect - something I have to reprimand my students for doing - you know that little deal when you give someone an instruction and they eye roll like "yeah, right" and refuse to follow. Anyway, point taken and clarified and moving on...
You are right, it does say "eye roll" never saw that
<shocked that I've been using that!>. I guess since I'm not an eye roller (unless my kids disagree w/ that statement) I didn't interpret it that way. Goodness, I won't be using that smiley anymore.
Ok on to your questions:
1. "hand-picked" - should have nothing more read into it other than some creative marketing wording and is actually not so offbase as we are now stopping some artists at the door and asking some to leave (per my prior post on weeding efforts & assesments of body of work compared to Submission Guidelines). This blurb small remain, as it is not a negative as Penny & Doreen have pointed out but a positive.
2. Leaning Tower of Pisa
your question I believe:
"Norma, I think you didn't read my full inquiry and are misquoting me here. Based on what you are saying here, AND these "rules" of photography composition, if I photographed the Leaning Tower of Pisa for a greeting card, just as if someone might like to use the scenery in the countryside as that entire discussion circled around, then such an image of this world famous building would be unacceptable in both photography circles AND greeting card design in light of the fact that the building is crooked, OR I'd have to digitally or creatively photograph it to make it appear straight? "
Of course you would not need to straighten the Leaning Tower of Pisa (unless this was your creative intent for humor or otherwise). The angle is expected and as long as all other elements of the image are executed well per the submission guidelines it would be acceptable (composition, image quality, typography, marketability). A barn that exists crooked in nature can be captured as such as long as all of the other elements "work" and it is the photographers job to use their eye and tools to get the best shot and edit the shot if needed to make it "work" be it the perspective, angle, lighting, cropping, etc.
3. Intentional Filter Usage:
your question I believe:
"someone else using creative filters to convey a certain feeling to coincide with her sentiment."
Filter use is fine and as with any treatement or effect the artist must determine that the end result meets the Submissin Guidelines. We do suggest that this be made evident in the Notes to Reviewer and probably also in the Artist's Notes so it is obvious that the effect is intentional.
Similar to my earlier answer below about making notes that prove to be helpful to the review team and possibly valuable to shoppers:
http://www.greetingcarduniverse.com/forum/yabb2/YaBB.pl?num=1326242009/27#27 Specifically:
Yes, it always helps to include details in the Notes to Reviewers field to share anything about your submission that you think would be helpful during the review like image source (is it 3rd party or yours), intentional effects & details that may not be so obvious like soft focus, off center, crooked, details outstide the safety margin, filters & effects, etc. Now this doesn't mean that just because you've noted it that it will be approved but it does give the reviewers a better understanding of the artist's intent and what was done deliberately. We often look to the title, keywords and Artist's Notes for clues but a clear note in Note to Reviewers is the most reliable and helpful.
Imagine if it is a crooked old barn it would make sense that you've included in at least your title and/or keywords and/or Artist's Notes terms along those lines ie: "Crooked Old Barn".