[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > I love guardian angels and girl at the Louvre. Guardian angels is one of > those happy moments where the juxtaposition of the figures creates a message > all its own. And the foggy background makes it perfect. Girl at the Louvre is > beautiful in that the young lady appears to be intimidated by the painting. > Humility in the presence of fine art. Wonderful work, young lady. Although I > liked the PUG image, I much prefer these two. > Paul
thanks much, Paul! (The guy with the statue got me to the KINSA finals btw.) ann > > > On Wed, Apr 06, 2005 at 11:14:41AM -0400, Ann Sanfedele wrote: > > > Nationale got me going on getting the entire Paris > > > porfolio up on line - > > > (so I got cheeky and put two of them on ebay, too) > > > > > > Scanned from fiber based prints... > > > direct links just to the images on my homepage. > > > > > > http://users.rcn.com/annsan/kidsinparis.jpg > > > http://users.rcn.com/annsan/guardianangelversaille.jpg > > > http://users.rcn.com/annsan/girlatthelouvre.jpg > > > > For me, the first one is head and shoulders above the others. > > The girl on the left just seems to encapsulate the scene. > > I can't even complain about the non-vertical "verticals" > > on the blinds, either - the uprights on the two upper > > windows are perfectly aligned with the shot, so I guess > > we're just looking at blinds that _aren't_ vertical. > > > > I'll leave the second shot for others to comment on. > > > > Finally, the girl in the Louvre. I think I'd have > > liked to see her looking up at the painting, seeming > > to make eye contact with the subject of the portrait. > >

