Voting period is over. Please don't add any new votes. Voting period ends on 25 Nov 2014 at 04:23:37 (UTC)
Original – Courtyard of the
Sultan Ahmed Mosque at night. Completed in 1616, the mosque (perhaps better known as the Blue Mosque) is about as large as the courtyard. It can hold 10,000 worshippers.
Reason
High quality, very attractive view of the mosque and its courtyard at night.
Support The usual exceptional quality from Benh. One comment though: The vertical field of view is so large in this picture that the geometric distortions introduced by insisting on keeping all vertical lines strictly vertical in the photo (I am especially thinking about the two towers) get too strong. Visually it looks a bit for me like the towers bend out-wards - because my eye and brain expects them to converge due to perspective. --
Slaunger (
talk)
16:02, 16 November 2014 (UTC)reply
Comment. Far more serious than any distortions of the towers is the gross distortion of the facade of the building, which is in reality flat, not curved as this picture shows. This fault renders the picture totally devoid of encyclopedic value, and so misleading that, far from becoming a featured picture, it probably should be removed from the articles in which it appears. Anyone looking at this picture gets a completely false impression of the building's architecture.
86.145.139.73 (
talk)
00:58, 17 November 2014 (UTC)reply
Support While I agree with the above comments on the curve being a little factually incorrect (btw why don't you register as a user, and then your comments will actually be able to be counted as you can vote?!), I disagree with this being 'totally devoid of encyclopedic value' as no-one would seriously look at this picture and seriously think it was a curved building? Anyone who has ever seen pictures of large buildings in single pictures will have seen this effect before. IMO it is a lovely picture, well taken...
gazhiley11:54, 18 November 2014 (UTC)reply
"Anyone who has ever seen pictures of large buildings in single pictures will have seen this effect before" - you won't see such photographs in textbooks on architecture, they would be discarded as trash (in fact, they would not even reach that discarding stage, no professional photographer would dare present them at all).
Tiptoethrutheminefield (
talk)
20:08, 24 November 2014 (UTC)reply
Oppose A gimmicky clichéd photograph devoid of encyclopedic value. Distorts reality. Reveals nothing of the building it purports to illustrate. As architectural photography, it is laughable.
Tiptoethrutheminefield (
talk)
20:01, 24 November 2014 (UTC)reply
Voting period is over. Please don't add any new votes. Voting period ends on 25 Nov 2014 at 04:23:37 (UTC)
Original – Courtyard of the
Sultan Ahmed Mosque at night. Completed in 1616, the mosque (perhaps better known as the Blue Mosque) is about as large as the courtyard. It can hold 10,000 worshippers.
Reason
High quality, very attractive view of the mosque and its courtyard at night.
Support The usual exceptional quality from Benh. One comment though: The vertical field of view is so large in this picture that the geometric distortions introduced by insisting on keeping all vertical lines strictly vertical in the photo (I am especially thinking about the two towers) get too strong. Visually it looks a bit for me like the towers bend out-wards - because my eye and brain expects them to converge due to perspective. --
Slaunger (
talk)
16:02, 16 November 2014 (UTC)reply
Comment. Far more serious than any distortions of the towers is the gross distortion of the facade of the building, which is in reality flat, not curved as this picture shows. This fault renders the picture totally devoid of encyclopedic value, and so misleading that, far from becoming a featured picture, it probably should be removed from the articles in which it appears. Anyone looking at this picture gets a completely false impression of the building's architecture.
86.145.139.73 (
talk)
00:58, 17 November 2014 (UTC)reply
Support While I agree with the above comments on the curve being a little factually incorrect (btw why don't you register as a user, and then your comments will actually be able to be counted as you can vote?!), I disagree with this being 'totally devoid of encyclopedic value' as no-one would seriously look at this picture and seriously think it was a curved building? Anyone who has ever seen pictures of large buildings in single pictures will have seen this effect before. IMO it is a lovely picture, well taken...
gazhiley11:54, 18 November 2014 (UTC)reply
"Anyone who has ever seen pictures of large buildings in single pictures will have seen this effect before" - you won't see such photographs in textbooks on architecture, they would be discarded as trash (in fact, they would not even reach that discarding stage, no professional photographer would dare present them at all).
Tiptoethrutheminefield (
talk)
20:08, 24 November 2014 (UTC)reply
Oppose A gimmicky clichéd photograph devoid of encyclopedic value. Distorts reality. Reveals nothing of the building it purports to illustrate. As architectural photography, it is laughable.
Tiptoethrutheminefield (
talk)
20:01, 24 November 2014 (UTC)reply