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Schmid+Basti
Participant
June 25, 2026
質問

Ablehnung meiner Bilder aufgrund von Qualitätsproblemen

Hallo, ich bin noch relativ neu hier und hätte versucht ein paar meiner Bilder hochzuladen. Leider wurde der Großteil der Bilder aus “Qualitätsgründen” abgelehnt, aber ein Teil der Bilder wurde auch akzeptiert. Leider erkenne ich keinen wesentlichen Unterschied (hab die Bilder extra so gut wie nicht bearbeitet) zwischen der Qualität der akzeptierten und der nicht akzeptierten Bildern, sodass ich nicht weiß, was ich ändern sollte. Über eine Einschätzung was bei folgenden Bildern das Problem ist, würde ich mich sehr freuen. Vielen Dank vorab für die Unterstützung!

 

    返信数 3

    daniellei4510
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    June 25, 2026

    Maybe this is closer. I just walked in from a bright sunny day and my eyes are still adjusting. My last example might be on the green side. In the end, such adjustments are up to the original photographer.

     

    Adobe Community Expert | If you aren't submitting your assets in sRGB, you probably didn't read the rules.
    daniellei4510
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    June 25, 2026

    Ack. STILL looks on the green side, at least without a side-by-side comparison. Play around. I also lowered the exposure on both.

    Adobe Community Expert | If you aren't submitting your assets in sRGB, you probably didn't read the rules.
    daniellei4510
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    June 25, 2026

    There’s heavy blue cast from the sky that the camera picked up. You might want to go for a more neutral tone.

     

    Adobe Community Expert | If you aren't submitting your assets in sRGB, you probably didn't read the rules.
    Nancy OShea
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    June 25, 2026

    It’s rare that Adobe accepts all images from a series. 

    1. The shrine is in total shadow which makes it unsuitable for commercial use.
    2. Too much midtones. Highlights & shadows (right & left sides of scale) are clipped.

     

    Nancy O'Shea— Product User & Community Expert
    Schmid+Basti
    Schmid+Basti作成者
    Participant
    June 25, 2026

    Thank you very much for the quick feedback. Is it also valid for the other two pictures? In the mountains you always have shadowed and lighted sides of the mountain, depending on its direction (north, east, south or west and time of day). From my point of view this makes it interesting at all, showing differences etc. If everything is in one color and brightness, it looks boring and not reflect the reality in the mountains to be honest...What would be your proposal how the edit such a picture to make it suitable? because the motiv should be not too much wrong I hope?

    Nancy OShea
    Community Expert
    Community Expert
    June 25, 2026

    Clipping is never a good thing. Missing shadow & highlight pixels at either end of the Histogram can’t be recovered and are lost forever. 

     

    In this quick & dirty example, I copied the original layer & opened up mountain shadows & highlights with a Levels Adjustment Layer Mask in Photoshop.  I added a warming filter to compensate for excessive blue tones. It’s not perfect, but you get the basic idea.

     

     

    Nancy O'Shea— Product User & Community Expert