Interesting.

What was the background of the other judges - teachers, photogs ?

Kenneth Waller

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Mark Cassino" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Judging Photos


> Had a new experience last Saturday. A consortium of camera / photo clubs
> in SW Michigan had their regular photo contest at the local community
> college, and I was invited to sit as one of the judges. I've entered a
> fair number of contests, but this was the first time I ever judged one.
>
> The judging as done by teams of three judges. We used USB numeric
> keypads with a keys programmed for "in" and "out".
>
> A few thoughts -
>
> 1. The process was very fast. Possibly even too fast. I looked at my
> watch after the first run through and started keeping time. In the
> course of 3-4 run troughs (acceptances on the first round, honors, and
> then prizes) we averaged about 30 seconds per photo (based on the the
> total number of photos in the first run through.) With about 200 photos
> to judge it almost had to be that fast. A lot more time was spent
> evaluating the prize winners vs the first cut. (I should comment that
> the entires were in 3 categories - prints, slides, digital.)
>
> 2. A lot of technical aspects of the shots just slap you in the face
> when you do the quick assessment. Bad lighting, bad color balance,
> awkward models (I was assigned to the portraiture group) just hit you
> like a baseball bat. Similarly, very good but low impact shots were at
> bit of a disadvantage.
>
> 3. I was surprised and how consistent the judging seemed to be. I'd
> estimate that my vote went with the majority about 90% of the time.
>
> 4. It only happened once - but one shot I initially voted against that
> got in I wound up voting _for_ in the next round. Made me think of some
> of the comments re the Pentax gallery.
>
> 5. Color calibration and contrast control was a real issue with the
> digital shots. A lot of the photographers were sitting in the room and
> the feedback with digital often was "that's not how it looks on my 
> screen."
>
> Overall - it was a pretty interesting experience. I always imagined
> judges looking at my photos like I look at them - pouring over them for
> a long time, looking at the nuance and detail. I should of put 2 + 2
> together - when you consider the numbers of photos they are looking at,
> it's a pretty snap judgment process. And the slightest technical fault
> can get your image booted...
>
> Anyhow - it was fun and I saw a lot of excellent photos. I observed the
> judging of the nature category as well - a bird shot took first place
> but I was surprised at how hard the judges were on the bird images. The
> standards for bird photography are sky high (no pun intended.)
>
> - MCC
> -- 
> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
> Mark Cassino Photography
> Kalamazoo, Michigan
> www.markcassino.com


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