Critique the Community: Submit Your Landscape Photos Now

Critique the Community: Submit Your Landscape Photos Now

If you haven't seen the latest episode of Critique the Community, make sure to check out the new surprise we've added to the series. As an immediate follow up, we're inviting the community to submit their landscape images now for our next round of critique. Make sure to follow the submission rules below to keep your image eligible to be chosen. Submissions will remain open until this Wednesday, January 17, at midnight.  

To submit your landscape images, you must:

  1. Have an active Fstoppers account.
  2. Upload your image to your Fstoppers profile page.
  3. Paste the URL of the image in the comments below.

The Internet can be a cruel and cutthroat place for photographers. For some reason, photographers are often extremely negative and cynical when looking at the work of their peers. Most photographers overwhelmingly say that they would like others to "C&C" their work, yet the conversation can often become less than inspiring and often downright depressing. Our hope with this segment, Critique the Community, is that the Fstoppers team can offer fair, yet encouraging commentary on some of the images found in the Fstoppers Community.

The Fstoppers Community Rating System

If you have an Fstoppers account, you are able to create your own profile and portfolio directly within the Fstoppers Community.  Once you have a portfolio uploaded, you can browse images in the community and rate the photos of your peers.  Even though art is usually a fairly subjective matter, we wanted to create a rating system that was as objective and unbiased as possible.  This way, if one of your images has been rated 50 times and has received an average rating of two stars, you could feel confident that maybe that particular image is not up to par.  Below is a simple chart explaining the Fstoppers Community Rating System. 

One Star: The Snapshot

One-star ratings are limited to snapshots only. Snapshots are usually taken to document a time or location, but little to no thought has gone into the creation of the image. If an image has been "lit" with external light (besides a direct on-camera flash), it is at least a  two-star picture. The majority of one-star images have had no post production work done to them, but do often have an "Instagram style" filter added to them. The average person these days snaps one-star images every single day with their smartphone. Most one-star images that pop up on sites like ours are images of flowers, pets, landscapes, sunsets, objects around a house, etc. If you read Fstoppers, you should not be sharing one-star images for any reason. 

Two Stars: Needs Work

All images, besides maybe five-star images, always have room for improvement, but two-star images "need work" before they should be included in your portfolio. As photographers, we are snapping thousands of images per year, but only a few of those images should ever be shared or put into our portfolio. A photographer who has taken a two-star image has put some thought into the composition, exposure, and post production, but for some reason has missed the mark. Two-star images should not be in the portfolio of a full-time professional photographer and amateur photographers should strive for something better. Even complete amateurs who don't understand photography at all are capable of taking two-star images from time to time. 

Three Stars: Solid

A three-star image is an all-around good image. The photographer has a solid understanding of the basics: composition, color, focus, subject matter, and post production. A three-star image is good, but it's not great. Most part-time professional photographers have mostly three-star images in their portfolios. Usually, a level three image would have been rated four stars if it had been shot in a better location, or with a better model showing a better expression, or there had been better post-production. A photographer capable of taking a three-star image is capable of taking four and five-star images if they would simply pay more attention to the details. 

Four Stars: Excellent

Four-star images are fantastic. In most cases, four-star images have a certain style to them that links them directly to their creator. Four-star images usually require planning and attention to extreme detail. It's almost impossible to shoot a four-star image by getting lucky. Four-star images have almost flawless conception, composition, lighting, subject matter, and post-production. If you have any four-star images in your portfolio, you should be very proud of yourself.

Five Stars: World-Class

Five-star images are flawless and unforgettable. The amount of time, energy, and talent that goes into the average five-star image is staggering. In many cases, these pictures require a team to produce, including a professional retoucher. The concept, lighting, subject, location, and post-production on these images has to be perfect. In some cases, the jump from four to five stars may be as simple as changing the unknown model in the picture with a celebrity or bringing in a set designer or stylist to make the image slightly better. Although there are always exceptions, most five-star images take days, if not weeks or months to produce.

Strengthening Your Own Portfolio

Even with our objective rating system, people are going to disagree over what they like, because ultimately, art is still a matter of opinion.  However, I believe once an image has been rated over 25 times, it will have a rating that is pretty fair and honest (we hope to deter trolls by giving negative Karma Points when a vote is more than one star away from the community average).  If one of the images in your own portfolio is rated lower than what you personally feel it should be rated, I'd urge you to try to look at the image from an unbiased angle.  Step back, erase your memory of the photoshoot itself, and try to imagine an art buyer, stock agency, potential client, or local gallery as they decided if they wanted to invest in your services.  Would your image make the cut?

Lee and I are not the greatest photographers in the world.  There are many many genres of photography that we have not been successful in or in many cases, have not even attempted in our careers.  However, I believe we have a pretty good idea of what works and what doesn't in terms of commercial viability.  Not every image is meant to sell or book you work and that is okay!  Snapshots and sentimental images are great and most definitely have a purpose.  Hopefully, our insight and critiques can help you decide what is and isn't worth putting in your public portfolio.  I hope these video critiques can help you see beyond the technical and personal elements that make up an image and begin looking at your own work in a new light.    

David Strauss's picture

David Strauss is a wedding photographer based in Charleston, SC.

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little (barely unknown) lake in the Italian Alps, The name is "Lago Palu". I took this photo some years ago and is one of my favorite photo of all time.

https://fstoppers.com/photo/212798

I can see why this photo is one of your favorites. Very nice. Interesting elements in the foreground, middle and background. The reflection is nice but isn't forced as the main element. Nice colors. Just really nice.

Thank you so much Douglas!

Christmas Eve Sunrise on Long Island Sound
https://fstoppers.com/photo/212815

Serenity at Mast Farm Inn
https://fstoppers.com/photo/210618

Well done. Can't say anything that I think would improve the photo.

https://fstoppers.com/profile/140353

The Edmund Pettis Bridge in Selma, Alabama the day before Thanksgiving.
I watched the clouds all day and knew the sunset would be amazing. So I took off from work just in time to watch this happen from a secret spot near the bridge.

I really like the forest but the river just seems too dark for me. At first I thought it was a cropping issue. Again I really like the forest part and can feel that cold winter day. Of course just my opinion and would appreciate any feedback on my photos in my account.

Love the leading lines and symmetry here.

Of course the leading lines are textbook perfect but what really interests me is how well the colors go together. The blending of the sea with the sky being right at the tip of the old pier is great. I enjoyed seeing this photo. Of course just my opinion and would appreciate any feedback on my photos in my account.

Day At The Lake

Nice but the sky seems like it was worked a little hard in post. Maybe a gradient ND filter could have been used to let you bring up the foreground without blowing out the sky. Of course just my opinion and would appreciate any feedback on my photos in my account.

Eagle Falls into Emerald Bay
https://fstoppers.com/photo/212837

Great photo! I really love the angle looking over the falls. Just my personal opinion, I would pull back the reds just a little.... You can really see it in the trees and whitewater. Overall, though, I'd be really happy with myself if I'd made this shot.

Thanks Mark! I'd normally tend to agree with you and try to make the white water actually white, but what you can't see behind me is the entire sky on fire (red/pink), which really gives the foreground that extra glow. There are no color adjustments made to the photo besides a +10 in saturation in Lightroom. Sometimes nature does all the work for you.

Didn't think about the sky behind you. Taking that into consideration, it changes the mood of the scene and I think I like it even more.

Every time I see this, I feel the need to take a road trip!

Lots of emotion in this photo. Not an easy shot to get with balancing the sun and the foreground.

That is something I struggle with all the time.

Not an easy photo to look at when it is freezing in New England. I like the framing with the wave break making a dividing line between the sea and the shore.

Sunrise, on the New South Wales, Central Coast, Australia

https://fstoppers.com/photo/212863

Cataloochee Fall. Maggie Valley, NC.
https://fstoppers.com/photo/209883

Gritty long exposure of Lower Falls in Rochester, NY
https://fstoppers.com/photo/212858

A very interesting landscape photo. Enjoy seeing a different take on landscape. The direction of the cloud movement enhances the flow of water over the waterfall while the non movement of the rocks in the foreground help anchor the photo. The harshness of the sun plays off the hardness of the building. Other words an interesting photo. Of course just my opinion and would appreciate any feedback on my photos in my account.

Early Morning Wave Splash, Terrigal, New South Wales, Australia

https://fstoppers.com/photo/212864

Great photo. Simple and complex at the same time. Simply a wave hitting the shore and simply the sun setting or rising but together a complex balance.

Talbot Lake in Jasper National Park -Alberta Canada https://fstoppers.com/photo/212870

I like the composition here and the tones. Feels like a cold fall day with a storm moving in. I like that you didn't just go for mostly sky even though the clouds are interesting. By showing more of the foreground gives it a sense of calm but one can still see that the clouds are indicating a sense of action is coming. Of course just my opinion and would appreciate any feedback on my photos in my account.

Ausangate Mountain area, in the Andes, Peru.
https://fstoppers.com/photo/212896

Spectacular! Heretical to say, but I would love to see what this image would be like with a very subtle and probably very difficult photoshopped to at least reduce the whites of the sailboats and buildings of the right horizon line, and at most replicate (clone?) the stunning faint white lights on black of the left horizon line over to the right horizon line as well. Great work! Congrats!

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