Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Hello,
I was wondering the different reasons for having discarded some photographs, since they cannot give a real reason, but they could be many for each type of image, given that they are on average from 4MB to 22.5MB and have no major problems either of ISO and disturbing, except a photo that of the carousel that was taken with a new generation smartphone and worked with PS.
Thanks for your valuable suggestions that you can give me.
Best wishes. Gianni
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Adobe always give a reason. What was it? Some experts here may be able to help you understand the issues.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
I simply don't understand why you discarded the photos I attached. no more.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
Sorry, WE did not discard them. You are talking to Adobe contributors, customers, experts here. Not Adobe staff.
I asked you for the reason given by Adobe. Please tell us. It might be "technical issues", "model release needed", "intellectual property release needed", "not suitable" or many other words. These details matter, even if you do not care for them. The experts here may help. Adobe WILL NOT spend time helping with this, their task is to quickly process 100,000 photos a day, not to explain details.
I see picture 1 would need a model release and picture 4 would need an IP release, but there may be other issues identified first.
Copy link to clipboard
Copied
colour noise and artifacts!
The second RR6F... image has colour noise in the wood.
The carousel has washed out colours and artifacts:
The train picture is simply awfully unsharp. In addition you would need model releases from the people in the picture. If I would analyze the picture more deeply on my desktop, I would detect multiple other issues with that picture and may be with the others too. But the train picture is even looking bad as a preview.
To be accepted in stock, your pictures need to be technically perfect so that the buyer has all his options to photoshop your pictures to his needs.
I suggest you do some reading before continuing to submit. If you are new to stock, you should consider these resources: https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/contributor/tutorials.html
Please read the contributor user manual for more information on Adobe stock contributions: https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/contributor/user-guide.html
See here for rejection reasons: https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/contributor/help/reasons-for-content-rejection.html
and especially quality and technical issues: https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/contributor/help/quality-and-technical-issues.html