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Mário Sousa
{K:16985} 1/29/2004
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very good image
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Eduardo Bernardes
{K:8999} 1/24/2004
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Excellent shot. Beautiful texture and composition. Congrats, Eduardo
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Mr. Arrey
{K:11516} 1/23/2004
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nice perspective.
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Pedro Libório
{K:53861} 1/23/2004
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I like the perspective! lovely done. kiss.
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Robert Gaither
{K:34128} 1/23/2004
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Yes I like old buildings and sturctures. Red brick is one of my favorites not too much bricks out here because I live in earthquake country. I really like this image. Nice find and capture.
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David Yates
{K:4698} 1/23/2004
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Antonella, I love that you posted this, as I have been thinking very much lately about trying to find abandoned industrial sites in my region for photo shoots. I live in an area (New England) with very little recorded history compared to yours, and land is very valuable, so these kind of sites, which are the closest we have to 'ancient ruins', are disappearing fast.
We forget sometimes that we (as photographers) are documenting history just as early scribes and classical painters and the pioneers of captured images did, that even though we live in an era that is over-satured with visual images, certain of the lost moments frozen by our cameras will become iconic of our time to those yet unborn.
Enough waxing philosophic!- your photo is beautifully composed with the skeleton of the building leading the eye into the frame. I do have two suggestions (I know, this is very audacious of me): I'd like to see more on the horizontal plane- particularly on the right, so that the cave-like interior lets you more 'into' the picture. Secondly, I'd increase contrast and saturation in the sky, to balance better with the ground (I know you don't like to mess to much in PS, but after all, if you'd had the perfect diagonal hard edge 2-stop ND grad filter to lay across the sky, the effect would be the same, and more like your eye saw it).
But of course my dear I like it very much anyway- I only presume to suggest because it's such a good shot and desrves further refinement.
Yours, D
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farewell ...!
{K:668} 1/23/2004
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although i dont like the old, bricks spirit but i find this one just Fantastic!
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David Fisk
{K:7444} 1/23/2004
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Antonella:
Beautiful,yet sad in so many ways. A lot of history that only served to remind us how temporal we are. A great capture my friend.
LAK David
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Roger Williams
{K:86139} 1/23/2004
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Interesting to see a great Hexanon lens at work. It captured the textures very well--brick, grass, glass, sandy soil... And all at full aperture? Very impressive--indeed, astonishing depth of field, sharpness and clarity. Is the T3 a digital camera? Film is marked n/a. Must have been quite dark unless you were using a very low ISO. The other Roger (ONE of the other Rogers) said it looked like a great Roman building. Frankly, it looks a bit like a straightened out Coliseum!
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Raffaele Bardelli
{K:3262} 1/23/2004
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significativa questa diagonale "cadente". Un bell'esempio di architettura e della nostra civiltŕ. Sarebbe stato bello anche un dettaglio piu' ravvicinato. Ciao.
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Teunis Haveman
{K:53426} 1/23/2004
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Antonella, Beautiful compositie This the old time for great shots Teunis
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Roger Cotgreave
{K:15892} 1/23/2004
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this is like one of those great Roman buildings..I take it that it is an old train yard, you have given life to it again....what characters? I tell you the town I live in is full of them 'except me'. It is a wild and wonderful place...love roger
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Tommaso Razzano
{K:8073} 1/23/2004
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Molto bella.... un esempio di archeologia industriale molto ben documentato. ciao ! Tommaso.
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Roberto Arcari Farinetti
{K:209486} 1/23/2004
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ecco la ns architettura.. in rovina bella prospettiva..!una acciaeria?!!?
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jon parsons
{K:13639} 1/23/2004
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Dearest Antonella , extraordinary capture of an old abandon factory or building... framed beautifully with great depth of field.. exquisite work....thinking of you,,,,jon
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