Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hola, soy una persona enamorada a la fotografia callejera, quiero compartir mi trabajo pero Adobe me rechaza todas mis fotos, las imagenes a continuación no tienen ningun trabajo de edición. Directamente descarga de la Camara. Alguien podrÃa ayudarme??
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hello,
Generally speaking, you need to do some post photo enhancing with a photo editor like Photoshop/Lightroom.
The quality isn't good when enlarged. You need to edit photos at least 100%.
Also, there are logos on the people's caps, shirts, bags. Company logos need an IP release.
The beach photo - composition isn't good. It is not good to have a sloping horizon.
Stock is not about just posting photos like you do on Instagram/Facebook/Tiktok etc.
You should read the Adobe Help guides to get started.
Have a read of this from Adobe about how to create better photos:
https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/how-to/tips-stock-image-acceptance.html?set=stock--fundamentals--adobe...
Have a look at the Adobe Stock tutorials:
https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/contributor/tutorials.html
And just follow the links.
You can change the language to Spanish.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
And this?
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
The same answer!
Overall quality, composition and the moon shot is too yellow and underexposed.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
These SOOC (straight-out-of-the camera) snapshots are not suitable quality for Adobe Stock. Leaning horizon, underexposed, poorly composed, blurry. Ask yourself what commercial project a Buyer might want to use these images for. As Ricky mentioned, virtually all images require some editing prior to posting to Stock. If you aren't willing to invest the time to learn how to expose and compose properly in camera and use Adobe Lightroom and/or Photoshop to edit, you are unlikely to achieve any success at Stock photography.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
You have also items that should be cropped out or removed. These are items that are cut off on the sides of your photos.
Your horizons are not level.
If you look at your photos at 200%, you can notice artifacts where dark and light colors meet.