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Hello,
What is it of? The quality is poor I'm afraid. Underexposed, poor composition, and so on. Did this get accepted by Shutterstock?? It wouldn't fit Adobe Stock's criteria!
Have a look at the Adobe Stock tutorials:
https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/contributor/tutorials.html
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-stock-contributor
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Hello,
What is it of? The quality is poor I'm afraid. Underexposed, poor composition, and so on. Did this get accepted by Shutterstock?? It wouldn't fit Adobe Stock's criteria!
Have a look at the Adobe Stock tutorials:
https://helpx.adobe.com/stock/contributor/tutorials.html
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...
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Hi, When postinng a picture for commercial use, its always better to understand how and where this image is applicable. Adobe Stockimage's criteria and acceptance is based on how a person who comes to stockimage site will accept it. Coz, nowadays people are lookinng for quick solutions everywhere, there's a saying that the best place to hide in today's world is the secound page of google, coz hardly anyone lands there as they deliver all the satisfying results in the first page's first session itself. I would suggest you to improve the quality of image before posting and learn the composition inn detail and understand the RULE OF THIRD. Half of the composition gets better there itself. All the best. Keep clicking.