> Yeah, forgot about that one, I had two images that were almost identical,
> you couldn't tell a difference at that size, but blown up it is clear that
> there are two different horses.
No worries. Just wanted to make sure it got caught (on the off chance
it didn't rotate when you were looking).
> The reason for the black background is because photographs especially color
> photographs seem much more vivid on black, the borders are actually light
> gray, which causes the whites in the images to look much brighter, there is
> a method to that madness.
Okay. Not being a photographer, graphics designer, or able to dress
myself in coordinating colors, I'll just assume you're right. :-)
> I have some prints on my printed portfolio that have black edges and some
> that have white edges, it never fails that people notices the black edge
> prints more, for those of you not familiar with photography, the black edge
> is a result of doing an enlargement from a slide.
Oddly, the bit about the slide I knew. I used to be very interested in
photography. In HS, I was a very good *technical* photographer, and
almost as good in the darkroom as the teacher before I was done, but my
shots were rarely as artistically inspiring or visually stimulating as
others'. But I really did like working in the darkroom.
--Ben
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