Ironically, just a couple of days ago my stock house sold a shot of  
the moon that took me about 5 minutes to execute. Ordinary pictures  
sell. However, I agree that some foreground elements can make such a  
shot more interesting. That usually works best as a composite, as  
illustrated by Jack. Otherwise, you can't get enough DOF at a  
reasonable ISO. Moon shots have to be wide open or close to it in  
order to get enough shutter speed for a crisp shot. (The damn moon  
keeps moving on us:-).
Paul
On Oct 8, 2006, at 9:57 AM, Shel Belinkoff wrote:

>> Nothing overly awesome, just a shot
>> of last night's big harvest moon.
>
>> http://www.neovenator.com/special/2006_harvest_moon.html
>
> John, it's a nice shot, but, like every other similar photo of the  
> moon, it
> is boring.  How many hundreds of these shots of the full moon have  
> we seen?
> While such a photo may show of the skill of the photographer, or the
> quality of the gear, artistically and creatively there's little  
> substance
> to such pics.
>
> A more interesting shot would be if there were something else in  
> the frame,
> perhaps a horizon, or a skyline, or perhaps it could be more  
> interesting if
> only a portion of the moon was shown in an upper corner.  Or maybe  
> a shot
> taken earlier in the evening, when the light was brighter, the sky  
> more
> colorful, the moon more "transparent" or lower to the horizon so  
> some other
> natural elements could be included in the shot.
>
> BTW, I'm not picking on you or anyone who wants to make such a  
> photo,  I'm
> just wishing for more and hoping that some of the people with long  
> lenses
> who make such photos might want to try something a little more  
> creative,
> unusual, and interesting.
>
>
>
> Shel
>
>
>
>
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