I appreciate everyone's comments. I just saw the Jack-lantern and had definitely missed that one. I would never catch the balloons because I don't know what I'm looking at. Im glad there is a safe forum to get help with this new AI. Thank you, Jodi
In the first 2 images the coins are malformed and irregular. In the balloon image, there are many drawing errors - the balloons are malformed, the packages have errors, the floating things in the air don't make sense. Buyers DO care about imperfections. If they download an image with such errors, they might complain to Adobe about the issues, which will result in the Buyer receiving a credit for the unusable image, and could also result in your account being deactivated.
Every Hanukkah photo I've l've looked at for comparison shows coins that are perfectly round with very specific designs, not random shapes.
The balloons: floating random objects that aren't attached to anything. A number of balloons have poorly rendered edges, strings that should be straight, at least one balloon with two strings. Ribbons on presents are strange or poorly wrapped.
Adobe Community Expert | If you can't fix it, hide it; if you can't hide it, delete it.
Thank you. I agree, the balloons should have one string each. I think real stock is too perfect. I never went to a party where all the gifts were perfectly wrapped. Or all the girls teeth were perfect. My real life pictures sell great and they are slice of life, none of the people are perfect including their hair. I think the site needs to go easier on the inspections, with the exception of 6 fingers, buyers won't care about the things only inspectors and other photographers would catch.
Buyers are already hating on AI contributors as it is. Perfection is key when it counts to be so. Sure, a kid's teeth aren't always straight, and there are reasonable allowances for that. And there's a difference between "perfectly wrapped' and randomized objects. And remember, moderators only need ONE reason to reject an asset. If they find one, they don't spend time looking for more, like many of us here do.
Adobe Community Expert | If you can't fix it, hide it; if you can't hide it, delete it.