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Hello all...this is my first post. I didn't expect it to be easy, so no big deal on it being rejected. Can anyone tell me why they think this was denied? Is it just because of the wagon?
Hello,
The wagon certainly doesn't help, so yes, in part it is because it is out of focus. Another reason though is the general composition.
What are you trying to show? The falling snow?
I would suggest reading some of the help guides from Adobe.
For example:
Composition comes under 'quality issues'.
Have a read of this. It's a brief guide on image quality:
https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/contributor/help/quality-and-technical-issues.html
Hi @default3ls0tanpb5ke , I am sorry to say that there are several things wrong. I am telling you so that you can learn.
What object are you trying to sell? There is no clear subject in this photo. What would someone search for to find it?
The photo is not in focus. The photo is not level. The wagon is poorly cropped. The shadows are underexposed. The highlights are overexposed. There should be more contrast and saturation in the photo.
Do not stop trying. However I suggest you study up on photo
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Did you use a tripod? Nothing seems to be razoe sharp. What was your depth of field, and chosen focus?
What was the reason for rejection?
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I did not use a tripod. I was shooting at f/2.8. It didn't give me one specific reason for rejection, it recommended I ask the community. Thank you for the response.
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There's always a reason, though sometimes the reason seems very general. We can usually help with that, but it's best to tell us the reason Adobe give, so we aren't guessing wrong. For example: intellectual property issues, too many similar pictures, quality issues...?
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Maybe you are right about that. In the salmon-ish colored rectangle, it says "Quality Issues"...I assumed that was just a general headline.
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Composition comes under 'quality issues'.
Have a read of this. It's a brief guide on image quality:
https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/contributor/help/quality-and-technical-issues.html
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Thank you so much.
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F2.8 is much too wide open for a landscape image, and will result in the very narrow depth of field you see here.
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Hello,
The wagon certainly doesn't help, so yes, in part it is because it is out of focus. Another reason though is the general composition.
What are you trying to show? The falling snow?
I would suggest reading some of the help guides from Adobe.
For example:
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Thank you, I will read over this.
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Hi @default3ls0tanpb5ke , I am sorry to say that there are several things wrong. I am telling you so that you can learn.
What object are you trying to sell? There is no clear subject in this photo. What would someone search for to find it?
The photo is not in focus. The photo is not level. The wagon is poorly cropped. The shadows are underexposed. The highlights are overexposed. There should be more contrast and saturation in the photo.
Do not stop trying. However I suggest you study up on photo composition, exposure settings, aperture settings, focus and white balance. This will help.
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Thank you this is helpful. I generally enjoy shooting with my darks a bit darker but I'm aware that doesn't mean every outlet accepts it. Thank you again, this was very helpful.
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I'm thinking about what you saying here. And I realize that I'm a graphic designer by trade and I take a lot of shots based on how I would use them in a design. Or thinking about how I can crop the framing for different collateral... I'm thinking out loud here, but it feels like I need to clean my palette when thinking about how I'm shooting something before I shoot it if I plan on uploading.
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To appreciate exposure, you should learn to use the histogram. The histogram here shows an poorly exposed picture with missing blacks (left).
That is responsible for the missing contrasts.
Some "small" tweaks enhance the overall appearance of the picture a lot. It's best seen in the blue and red of that disturbing object in the front of the picture:
It would still need to get some noise reduction, as the noise got "enhanced" too.
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Spend some time looking at current Adobe Stock Inventory in your keyword category. That should give you some idea of what you should aim for.
You'll see that what separates great stock images from random snapshots is a clear subject, good composition that draws viewers into the scene and tells a story.
Adobe Stock customers expect highest visual and technical quality for use in commercial projects. That begins with proper lighting, focus (depth of field), color saturation and white balance. In low light conditions, it's helpful to use a stable tripod with a remote shutter control and external light sources. Also atmospheric artifacts from snow, rain and fog and can be very challenging because of what water droplets to do your light. You may need to take multiple exposures at different settings and layer stack in post-editing.
Hope that helps.