Thanks for the additional comments ... Paul, Michael, Mark, Harry, Boris, Bruce, et al!
I have about 8-12 exposures of this scene where I varied the dividing line of the wall, foreground and background, and the focus point. How the wall, the foreground and the background interact, where the focus zone is placed, are all pretty important in this kind of photo. In the end, this is the framing and focus zone I like most as it enhances the near-far relationships and creates that feel of several planes in one view. My eye rests naturally in the bottom third and reaches up into the distance. I also feel it works best with the rest of the set. But that's my opinion ... which in this case I get to stand by having tried the other crops and such and not liking them as much. I love this stuff. :-) Godfrey mark hahn (amongst others) wrote: > I'm not big on how the wall divided the photo up > either... >> http://homepage.mac.com/ramarren/photo/PAW7/04.htm -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List [email protected] http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net

