Critique the Community
Travel Photos
Upload Your Best Travel Photos
Upload Your Best Travel Photos
Congratulations to Marek Stefech for submitting the highest rated image and to Qais Zureikat as the random lucky winner of this week's Critique the Community. Please message Lee Morris after you head over to the Fstoppers Store to pick out your free tutorial.
The next Critique the Community is going to images inspired by "Joy". If you have an image to submit to this new Critique the Community, head over to the Joy Critique the Community Post here. Submissions are open until 11:15 PM Eastern Time on March 29th.
For the next Critique The Community we will be judging "travel" photos.
The coronavirus is bumming all of us out and many of us are stuck inside for the next few weeks/months. We were supposed to be meeting Elia Locardi in Japan in a few weeks to begin filming another project, and I'm sad to say that it is now canceled. We need your help to cheer us up. Show us some of the most amazing travel photos so that we can decide where we want to vacation after this whole thing is behind us.
Fri, 03/20/2020 - 12:00
This contest has ended.
Click on the thumbnails below to comment and rate each image.
Click here to learn about the Fstoppers rating system and what each star value means.
104 Comments
Perhaps a good time to ask 'what is travel?' I'm seeing a lot of generic landscape.
I threw in some images of lego minifigures exploring our world. Hopefully I get points for creativity.
A friend of mine does that with Skeletor. Love it.
Thanks.
Landscape images are still considered "travel". Particularly if they make you want to travel there.
Just like food, street, portrait etc can be considered "travel" if they represent a location via culture, locals or landmarks.
That's not true at all. A simple photo of a well known landmark, or a native animal, or traditional attire, can be a portfolio worthy image if done well.
Doesn't mean it has a good chance of winning the competition but it would still have commercial value.
If you took a photo of the back streets in Melbourne, AUS. at night then that would be a photo that represents the city pretty well (due to a lot of street art and vibrant night life scene).
Taking a good photo of a kangaroo is a great way to sell tourism to Australia. Just look at the social media page for Tourism Australia. It's literally a portrait shot of a kangaroo.
By your logic your photos aren't travel because the locations aren't EPIC. (not a comment on your photography because I would consider them portfolio worthy). But the locations aren't anything special.