Original - Broccoli and a cross section on a white background. Broccoli is approx 15cm tallEdit 1 by
Fir0002 - reduced exposureNot for voting Hard light comparison
Oppose Cultivar not identified (shouldn't be too hard). Nice to see your umbrella turned up, but the fine detail shows up better with hard light in this case. It also looks over exposed to me.
Noodle snacks (
talk) 00:35, 23 January 2009 (UTC)reply
I disagree - the hard light, at least in your sample shot, looks too harsh and the broccoli is left looking unrealistically dark. I'm not sure what colour the original of yours was, but the broccoli I photographed was relatively pale. That said you're probably right that the original is a bit bright and the edit looks the most realistic. As for the cultivar I suppose I could go ask at Coles, but I suspect from
this it's Calabrese --
Fir0002 05:02, 23 January 2009 (UTC)reply
Weak Oppose I just don't think that the photographing of a common everyday object on a white background is FP material. Sure it's sharp and well exposed, but once you are set up you can switch in and out thousands of subjects that will all be sharp and well lit but does that make them interesting to have on the front page? Hope you see my point, it's nothing against the images themselves, but where does it end, will we have an FP fruit and veg month with a different one on every day?! I don't see people rushing to read
Broccoli when seeing this. I think there is strong encyclopedic merit to seeing the fruit attached to its tree as well/instead.
Mfield (
talk) 01:06, 23 January 2009 (UTC)reply
But broccoli doesn't grow on trees you know ;-). --
jjron (
talk) 06:24, 23 January 2009 (UTC)reply
Oppose per Mfield and Noodle snacks. The exposure problem at least should be fixable.
Papa Lima Whiskey (
talk) 01:08, 23 January 2009 (UTC)reply
Original - Broccoli and a cross section on a white background. Broccoli is approx 15cm tallEdit 1 by
Fir0002 - reduced exposureNot for voting Hard light comparison
Oppose Cultivar not identified (shouldn't be too hard). Nice to see your umbrella turned up, but the fine detail shows up better with hard light in this case. It also looks over exposed to me.
Noodle snacks (
talk) 00:35, 23 January 2009 (UTC)reply
I disagree - the hard light, at least in your sample shot, looks too harsh and the broccoli is left looking unrealistically dark. I'm not sure what colour the original of yours was, but the broccoli I photographed was relatively pale. That said you're probably right that the original is a bit bright and the edit looks the most realistic. As for the cultivar I suppose I could go ask at Coles, but I suspect from
this it's Calabrese --
Fir0002 05:02, 23 January 2009 (UTC)reply
Weak Oppose I just don't think that the photographing of a common everyday object on a white background is FP material. Sure it's sharp and well exposed, but once you are set up you can switch in and out thousands of subjects that will all be sharp and well lit but does that make them interesting to have on the front page? Hope you see my point, it's nothing against the images themselves, but where does it end, will we have an FP fruit and veg month with a different one on every day?! I don't see people rushing to read
Broccoli when seeing this. I think there is strong encyclopedic merit to seeing the fruit attached to its tree as well/instead.
Mfield (
talk) 01:06, 23 January 2009 (UTC)reply
But broccoli doesn't grow on trees you know ;-). --
jjron (
talk) 06:24, 23 January 2009 (UTC)reply
Oppose per Mfield and Noodle snacks. The exposure problem at least should be fixable.
Papa Lima Whiskey (
talk) 01:08, 23 January 2009 (UTC)reply