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Inspiring
November 15, 2018
Answered

Are there technical standards for submissions?

  • November 15, 2018
  • 3 replies
  • 877 views

I'm getting some really mixed messages out of which images I submit are accepted and which rejected. I'm looking for some better instruction on what to submit than I've been able to find combing the site.

I know this:

  • Submit images in JPEG format.
  • Minimum image resolution: 4 MP (megapixels)
  • Maximum image resolution: 100 MP (megapixels)
  • Maximum file size: 45 MB (megabytes)
  • No watermarks or timestamps
  • Do not upsample your files; submit the maximum file size that your camera can produce.


But are there, I don't know, EV values, or hardline ISO parameters, is there anything other than "Make sure your photo isn't over or underexposed" to me know what is worth submitting?
Because I've submitted photos I was sure would pass that didn't, and I've had photos I was unsure of which did. It's proving hard for me to figure out what to do based on experience and research alone.

Thanks in advance for any help!

This topic has been closed for replies.
Correct answer ashtonf74863711

For future folks, the answer is no.
All guidelines for submissions are exactly that, guidelines.

3 replies

ashtonf74863711AuthorCorrect answer
Inspiring
November 19, 2018

For future folks, the answer is no.
All guidelines for submissions are exactly that, guidelines.

Ricky336
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 16, 2018

I understand your problem wondering why some are accepted and some are not. It does seem to be a bit hard to predict.

BUT, most of the time there is a reason and most of the time I can see what they are refering to when I get a rejected image.

'...is there anything other than "Make sure your photo isn't over or underexposed" to (let) me know what is worth submitting?'

YES! There actually is. Your histogram! It is invaluable. Really learn to read your histogram. It can tell you A LOT!! You need to look where your highlights and shadow areas are. How much detail is there?

As, I'm sure you know, shutter speed, aperture and ISO work together to give you your exposure. Adobe doesn't give gudielines on what shutter speed, aperture and ISO to use. That's up to the photographer.

Nothing is a hard and fast rule. Adobe can only give generalisations.

'...I quit submitting edited photos, just take my RAWs, convert to JPEG, make sure the white balance is reasonable, and submit.'

You 'should' always do some post-processing, Adjusting exposure, white balance, white and black points, tweaking the tone curve etc. To get it 'right in the camera' isn't a good reason not to do post processing. (Even with films, there are a number of development adjustments you have to do apart from slide film).

jacquelingphoto2017
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 16, 2018

Hi ashtonf

There are some guidelines that Adobe recommends we all get familiar with. They are discussed in Everything Rejected . Be sure to read all the information of all the links and sub-links of the selected correct answer, so that you can get a broad understanding of what Adobe requires. You will also see an example of the quality exposure recommended.

There is no hard and fast rule regarding what ISO to use. This is so because depending on the lighting of where you shoot you may have need to change your ISO setting. For example you may need higher ISO to shoot at nights or in dark areas than what you'd use at day or well lit areas. The general recommendation is under normal circumstance, use mainly the lowest ISO on your camera, or to try not to exceed 400. That again depends on the camera you use. For example a smaller camera will produce more artifacts at 400ISO than larger cameras. If there's need to increase ISO, (for example shooting in poorly lit area) you should know that increased ISO results in more noise/grain.

Depending on the camera you use, you might be able to set aperture and shutter speed. In terms of  those settings, that depends on the lighting (intensity of sunlight, cloudiness, shade, sky shot, indoor, outdoor, etc). For example I live in the tropics. On a sunny day at ISO100 I might get a good shot of an object outdoor with 1/250 shutter speed and F7.1 aperture, however to take a sky pic I might need to set my shutter speed at 1/800 and aperture at F10 or F11.  Some cameras however, have other methods of exposure compensation settings.

You will also note that minimal post processing is allowed to correct noise, grains, contrast, and exposure.

You'll also need to download the manual of your camera and learn all there is about its operation. Then you need to practice. Please note that shooting in manual mode in a lot of cases produces better quality pictures. Also is the use of a tripod.

I hope you found this helpful

Best wishes

JG

Inspiring
November 16, 2018

Thank you for your time Jacquelin!

Alas, I'm pretty familiar with my camera, I shoot in manual with minimal ISO (as much as I can get away with given the light), and I quit submitting edited photos, just take my RAWs, convert to JPEG, make sure the white balance is reasonable, and submit.

I've also read through the Adobe recommended reading, and I implemented what I needed to based on that before choosing what to submit. I'm still struggling to form a mental map of what's going to be accepted and what won't before I invest the time to keyword and title photos.

I was looking for measurable things because I'm getting an unclear message. If I was only getting "exposure problem" rejections, I would think my means of measuring my exposure was malfunctioning, either my shutter speed, aperture, or ISO were being reported back to me by my Sony body incorrectly. But instead, photos out of the same set might be accepted, rejected for exposure, rejected for artifacts (if I resized the image down below 45mb), rejected for being out of focus despite the object of the image being in focus (I shoot a lot of animals with a wide open aperture, so I have submitted shots with face in focus and body not as much), rejected for technical issues, and rejected for aesthetic appeal. Again, photos from the same set which wouldn't look out of place beside each of those rejects have been accepted. It's beginning to feel like I'm at the mercy of the moderator du jour.

The MP and MB parameters provide me concrete, actionable decision protocols when I'm going through my photos (not that any of my photos falls outside of 4-100MP), and the rest of what I've been able to find from Adobe hasn't changed my experience when I submit photos.

I'm a little dejected,
Ashton

jacquelingphoto2017
Community Expert
Community Expert
November 17, 2018

Hi ashton

It sounds as though you do no post processing at all. I started out without post processing; some approved, but most didn't. I've found that some post processing is required. My observation is that no matter the lighting, even when the subject is overexposed, the image ends up with some level of grains. I currently do not do a lot of adjustments. If I select an image of the subject I want to post, that I consider is reasonably exposed, all I do is to inspect it at 100 to 200% to check for noise and use Photoshop noise reduction tool to reduce the noise, and do the necessary sharpening and upload. Of course like you I now shoot in RAW. To be honest with you, I do not fully understand how to read the histogram, so with the exception of clippings, I ignore it, yet I still get increasing approvals. It was the illustration at Create better photos for Adobe Stock with 7 tips for success   that gave me an idea of what exposure that is likely to be accepted. In terms of figures, that is kind of impossible to set a figure, since different circumstance determines the camera setting required. I read somewhere on another site that a figure for aperture and shutter speed was suggested. I tried it; yes it worked for some circumstances, but for most of my shooting, it would either produce over exposure or under exposure.

It sounds as though you're an experienced photographer. If you are it is possible that the images you shoot only requires noise/grain/artifacts corrections.