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Hello ,I send several photos that I took with my mobile phone , but all of them were rejected . Please , can you explain the reason and guide me to correct it . Im greatful .
Hello,
There are a few problems with your pictures- composition being the main one I think. As you have people in them as well, you will need a model release. You can't take photos of people without their permission as these photos will be used commercially.
Asa these were also taken with a smartphone, the quality generally speaking isn't so good when enlarged. The pixels begin to show when zoomed in - another reason. Due to the fact that these are for comercial use, the quality falls apart.
Yo
...I would classify these as snapshots, with little or no commercial value. Take @ricky336's advice and read up on the standards expected for Adobe Stock.
First of all the horizons are not level.
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Hello,
There are a few problems with your pictures- composition being the main one I think. As you have people in them as well, you will need a model release. You can't take photos of people without their permission as these photos will be used commercially.
Asa these were also taken with a smartphone, the quality generally speaking isn't so good when enlarged. The pixels begin to show when zoomed in - another reason. Due to the fact that these are for comercial use, the quality falls apart.
You won't be able to correct these pictures to meet Adobe's standards, I think.
Read these guides to give you a better idea of what Adobe wants.
Quality:
https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/contributor/help/reasons-for-content-rejection.html
User guide:
https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/contributor/user-guide.html
Exposure:
https://www.adobe.com/creativecloud/photography/discover/exposure-in-photography.html
Composition:
https://www.adobe.com/creativecloud/photography/discover/photo-composition.html
Learn and support:
https://helpx.adobe.com/support/stock-contributor.html
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I would classify these as snapshots, with little or no commercial value. Take @ricky336's advice and read up on the standards expected for Adobe Stock.
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First of all the horizons are not level.
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Besides the obvious quality issues in your third picture, you would need a model release from the people walking around.
The quality issues are getting obvious, when looking at the pictures at 100%. When you only check the picture on your phone, they will look great, especially when you check the wole picture, an seeing as such a reduced image.
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Here's an example of what a small-sensor phone camera does to an image - it crushes the detail. The other give-away that these are cell phone images is the fact that they're all shot in portrait orientation. Remember sometimes to rotate the phone sideways to capture landscape format!
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Hi @Soheil .M ,
All your files have noise grains. The first and second files also have chromatic noise.
Due to sensor size and limited depth of field, there are lost details in the first file. In my opinion, phone cams do not take good landscape photos.
The second photo is either slightly under exposed or has a white balance issue and also has a shallow depth of field. I'm not sure if the shakes were taken into consideration.
Due to the small sensor, details are lost in the third file.
To view the quality of your files, you need to zoom in to between 100 and 200%. It is difficult to get high approval rate using a phone camera. Here you can learn more about the limitations associated with using mobile phone to take stock photo....
Best wishes
Jacquelin