Skip to main content
January 6, 2023
Question

A lot of my pictures has been rejected

  • January 6, 2023
  • 1 reply
  • 3028 views

Hey guys, 

 

I'm new here and uploaded some photos. But the most units were been rejected. All of them have the issue "quality problems", in it there were some of my favorites. Maye you can say me why they were rejected?

 

Here some IDs: 557713111, 557713052, 557713048, 557713158, 557712937

 

Thank you very much for help.

This topic has been closed for replies.

1 reply

George_F
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 6, 2023

We are fellow Stock Contributors here in the forum, and we aren't able to access your account.  If you'd like feedback on a few photos, feel free to upload the full sized photos in a comment on this post 🙂

George F, Photographer & Forum Volunteer
January 6, 2023

Sure, my bad sorry 🙂 Attached some pictures. Do you know if I can see the keywords after rejecting I used? I want to save them because, I did the work and maybe I need them in the future again. I have another question, is it possible that the Adobe Stock account gets blocked if I have too many rejected pictures? 

 

I have to reduce the quality of the images, that I can upload all 10 units. Thats only for information.

 

Thank you very much for your help!

Jill_C
Community Expert
Community Expert
January 6, 2023

Thank you too 🙂 I have Sony A7 III and Sigma 24-70 DG DN 2.8. What can be a reason here? What can I change in settings to test if its will be better?


First, Google "lens calibration test sheet" and follow the instructions to verify that it's not the camera/lens combination that is causing images to be unfocused. Then read the camera manual about all the focus features of the camera. Then understand the impact of shutter speed and aperture on focus. Then practice hand holding at different shutter speeds to learn the slowest shutter speed at which you can effectively shoot. For me, it's no less than 1/60th. Then learn the highest ISO that your camera can achieve without introducing too much noise and stay under that ISO setting. Have you taken a camera course? Start with the basics, and don't assume that just having an expensive camera is going to result in high quality images. 

Jill C., Forum Volunteer