Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hi,
I have done a session with my model studying at dusk and at night in a room, so the images don't have too much light, and have been rejected with the following explanation: "Common problems that can affect the technical quality of images include exposure problems, artistic flou, excessive filtering or artifacts/noise."
These photos were accepted in other agencies that are known to be very restrictive with no problems. I find the photos are not overedited, they don't have noise and the luminosity of the scene is the corresponding one to the idea I want to transmit.
Thank you in advance!
IMG_3054-Editar.jpg - underexposed shadows and overexposed highlights. Her hand/arm are the brightest and most noticeable part of the image.
IMG_3076-Editar.jpg - similar issues here. The hands, which are presumably the focal point of the frame, are not in sharp focus.
IMG_3048-Editar.jpg - underexposed shadows. The large book should have been removed from the foreground.
IMG_3141-Editar.jpg - harsh lighting creates unattractive shadows in her face
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
IMG_3054-Editar.jpg - underexposed shadows and overexposed highlights. Her hand/arm are the brightest and most noticeable part of the image.
IMG_3076-Editar.jpg - similar issues here. The hands, which are presumably the focal point of the frame, are not in sharp focus.
IMG_3048-Editar.jpg - underexposed shadows. The large book should have been removed from the foreground.
IMG_3141-Editar.jpg - harsh lighting creates unattractive shadows in her face
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Adobe Stock is not other services. Stock have higher acceptance standards because their customers expect top quality assets for use in commercial projects.
Even exposure, good lighting, neutral white balance & proper focus are essential.
Compare your work with other stock inventory.
https://stock.adobe.com/search?k=study
It might help to see what other contributors are doing in this keyword category.
Hope that helps.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Thank you very much.
The other stock service that accepted them was ShutterStock, which has a background of accepting me lees photos than Adobe, thats why it shocked me.
After having a look at your suggestions I have a doubt. What should I change if I want to make a low light scenario of a model studing at nigth?
The low light atmosphere is already in my pics, and the quality I would say its not that bad.
Thank you again.
Best,
Dani.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Little known fact: Most nighttime scenes in movies and television are actually shot in full daylight. Why? Because it's simpler to subtract light from a well-lit scene than it is to create something from nothing in post-production.
The same techniques can be applied to still photos in Photoshop or Camera Raw, giving you greater control over light/shadow and exactly where adjustments are applied.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Shutterstock is not very demanding in quality. I do not know about your experience, but I have many accepted assets with Shutterstock that I would today not submit anymore. They were refused here at Adobe and that rightfully, in my eyes.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Yes, everything changes. About year ago Shutterstock refused about 80% my photos, Adobe only 20%. Month ago Shutterstock took 80%, Adobe refused 80%. I worked on quality a little(lower iso, higher shutter speed and less post-processing) now Shutterstock accept 100%, Adobe about 80% again. Mostly one shot nature pictures.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
You should always get the best light to your model.
they don't have noise
By @danirevis
Sorry, but they have noise:
I have also experimented with low light situations, and my results (not intended for stock) are not conclusive. But for stock, you should use other methods to give the night impression. A clock would help, a lightsource would help.