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Hello Adobe community,
Am new to the stock world , just tried first few pics ,getting tech issues ,
read few posts in this community with same problem ,they were talking about histogram,
where can we see this histogram ,in which software ?
Do i have to edit & upload pics or unedited raw pics r better ?
which is the ideal histogram and how to manage it for every pic ?
This was the pic i uploaded and want to know why it got rejected ...?
morover uploading directly from my ios reduces the sizes automatically on this portal ?
Thanks
Hi @Anoop0101 ,
I like your composition. However there is a number of issues with your photos. To see these issues, please zoom to 100%.
There is not sufficient depth of field. For that reason some areas, the edges are soft. For example the edges of the mitten on the babies hand is not defined. It's soft.
There is also color noise. Look at the hair of the little boy. Its blue green and black. It should be all black. Luminance noise is also present. And especially around the edges of the subject
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Is that the actual file you submitted? It is only 1080 x 1440 pixels. Please check the requirements again, if that's the case. If not we need to see your ACTUAL file, the one you submitted, not another file saved another way. Also, did you submit three model releases with the picture?
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Hi,
yes thats the file i submitted &
yes submitted the model releases ,which were accepted after 3-4 trial n error & corrections ,
now landing on technical issues as error,
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Refer to technical requirements here:
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Hello,
The image quality is not good when enlarged. You see it becoming pixelated. Did you take this on a smartphone?
It probably won't be accepted due to the image quality.
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I like your image. It's very nice for sharing with family and friends on social media. But Adobe Stock customers expect highest visual and technical quality for print and digital commercial ad campaigns. See links below.
Digital photos are rarely perfect without some correction in Photoshop or Lightroom. But your photo is too small which causes artifacts. And there is obvious motion blur on the child's mittens. So for those reasons alone, I agree with the Adobe Stock reviewers. The technical quality is not good enough.
Understand your equipment's limitations and make adjustments where possible. Read this article:
Keep working at it. And better luck with your next submission.
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Hi @Anoop0101 ,
I like your composition. However there is a number of issues with your photos. To see these issues, please zoom to 100%.
There is not sufficient depth of field. For that reason some areas, the edges are soft. For example the edges of the mitten on the babies hand is not defined. It's soft.
There is also color noise. Look at the hair of the little boy. Its blue green and black. It should be all black. Luminance noise is also present. And especially around the edges of the subject, is extremely noisy. There seem to be distorted pixels as shown int he faces.
You need to use a photo editor such as Photoshop to make corrections of your photos. You use this to correct exposure, white balance, clean noise etc, and also to remove IP items for commercial uploads.
The histogram is divided into five sections, right to left, white, highlights, exposure, shadows and blacks. It mainly tells you about your photo. If your photo is low key (having a lot of dark, and shadow areas) then it would peak at the left. If it is high-key, (having a lot of white and/or highlights}, it will peak at the right, and sometimes clipped at the side and top. The whole idea is to make sure your photos does not have so much highlights, or dark areas so that details are lost, and also to make sure the exposure is ok. Try to get exposure centered, but at the same time if you have a photo with white background you may have a slight peak towards the right in the white segment. The converse is true if your photo is mainly black, or shadowed. Large clipping at the sides and tops are indication to correct the relevant fault, be it highlight or dark/shadow, but there is no ideal settings that fits all.
Best wishes
JG
https://incomepayout.blogspot.com/p/income-requirements-and-payout.html