Please give the reason for the refusal. Please find below, what I've detected, simply looking at the pictures:
None of your pictures are sharp (in focus), some have a signature and some have applied excessive processing. The horizontal lines on your pictures will be considered as an error. Converting to monochrome leads to a refusal. Noise is a technical issue, as is also under, over exposure, focus and many more.
Pixar figures won't be accepted for IP reasons. Make sure not to reference anything that reminds Pixar characters.
ABAMBO | Hard- and Software Engineer | Photographer
The reason for refusal is the wonderfully vague 'quality issues' as a newcomer I find this extremely unhelpful. I don't know what you mean by signature (is this a digital embed?) I did not convert the image to monochrome, it was born that way. I have not altered these images to adjust contrast because if I do they get rejected for alteration. The same will happen if I try to reduce the noise. The horizontal lines seem to be an affinity problem.
grid_0 (31).jpg is monochrome. Monochrome images are rarely accepted.
The refusal reasons are generic, because Adobe optimizes image moderation to the maximum. But still, they are valuable for the primary refusal reason.
Also, Adobe expects us to submit "perfect" pictures and moderation is done to protect potential buyers, not to give us contributors in depth assessment of our failures. Fellow contributors like me review posts here, based on experiance with own refusals and accepted pictures.
The images are digital so they are created in black and white rather than a colour photo thats converted. I'm starting to get the idea...I need to pay for a sub to lightroom to get contrast fixes accepted. Its difficult to get started when its all pay out before revenue comes in. Thanks for the links but I didn't find the articles all that halpful in telling me what I need to do to get an image accepted....such as resolution and size. It seems to be a trial and error process.
I didn't notice the horizontal lines on the original but they appear sometimes when affinity photo resizes and image, exported as bilinear usually gets rid of them so maybe its an upload problem on here?
Please explain exactly what the connection is to Pixar in the first picture. Also please tell is the full subject and keywords you used to submit that picture.
The file name includes Pixar, so I guess the tag was suggested from that. Any art you submit must be completely original, not copied, not fan-art, not inspired by any other character. I have no idea if that applies here - but if you get over the technical issue, you will need an IP release where you speak as the owner of all rights to the work.