Addressing Quality Issues and Improving Acceptance Rates for Illustration Artwork
"Hello, I need your help with quality issues. Recently, two out of every three of my images have been rejected."
I will soon submit all my pending images for approval, but I don't want to take up too much of the moderators' time. If my image isn't suitable, it should be rejected. I don't upload images randomly. For example, I create a collection, select the best thousand out of five thousand images, and submit them for approval (at one point, the waiting period was over four months, so I didn't want to send my work during that congestion and waited). I would like to share with you my most recently rejected images. I enjoy creating surreal or illusion-style visuals.
When I review topics in the forum, issues like object errors or incorrect exposure seem to stand out, but I wonder how this applies to illustrations. Is the same photographic logic used here? There's a big difference between photographs and illustrations
(if we judge illustrations like photographs, none would pass because they are very different).
Can you tell me the critical points for evaluating illustrations?
If I submit a thousand images for approval and only a hundred are accepted, am I spamming? The number of my rejected images keeps increasing despite improving quality, and I don't offer too many alternatives – at most two or five, just to maintain the value of the collection."








