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Flyy1 — S. 03

Published: 2011-07-22 22:09:11 +0000 UTC; Views: 2268; Favourites: 66; Downloads: 194
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Description Model: S.

Please respect the model.

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Comments: 13

helderm [2012-09-16 05:10:23 +0000 UTC]

I respect her. Great model.

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Flyy1 In reply to helderm [2012-09-16 13:11:06 +0000 UTC]

Thanks-I will convey.

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FEFIT [2012-05-03 01:38:33 +0000 UTC]

"Where there is no gift there is no art." --Lewis Hyde
Thanks for sharing your gift.

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Flyy1 In reply to FEFIT [2012-05-11 09:34:09 +0000 UTC]

Thanks you-that's a big compliment.
Really appreciate it.

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FEFIT [2012-05-03 01:37:27 +0000 UTC]

great image

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Hellraze [2012-01-29 03:10:04 +0000 UTC]

This image is gorgeous! great work!

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Flyy1 In reply to Hellraze [2012-02-11 18:19:59 +0000 UTC]

Thank you very much.
Appreciate it.

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deshi001 [2011-12-10 01:20:37 +0000 UTC]

"There can be only ONE!!" *giggles*

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Flyy1 In reply to deshi001 [2011-12-10 10:40:51 +0000 UTC]


Yup...

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LightrayPhotography [2011-08-09 00:09:37 +0000 UTC]

Is that your sword... or the models? And why include it? Why did you choose this pose and this expression for your model? What is the meaning behind the photograph? I mean, I get it. Spot light the wall, light her from one side - generate powerful haloing and contrast while making her side lit. Its technically amazing, but where is the passion? What makes photography art is the critical eye - and what did your mind bring to this to make it special? Other than attractive girl + sword + canned lighting techniques.

Just wondering.

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Flyy1 In reply to LightrayPhotography [2011-09-02 07:55:28 +0000 UTC]

Sorry for the late reply and thank you for the feedback.

Ok,so the short answers:
1. The sword is mine.
2. I found it pleasing during the shoot.
3. To be honest, not sure that there is a meaning. If you
look at the model she is small and frail, yielding a weapon
that can remove your head with one swoop...or just an attractive
model with a sword-whichever you prefer...
3. As for the passion have a look at my longer answer:
[link]

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sheber In reply to Flyy1 [2011-10-06 20:40:28 +0000 UTC]

There are some very interesting points brought up by both of you but what I think needs addressing is the basic human need to create order out of chaos, or from a design standpoint, to answer the question of purpose. If the sword has no literal purpose (in this instance you mentioned the model's slight stature, so an imposing geometric form halved in the background would make "sense"), the viewer strives to grasp some visual meaning (direction, balance, movement, emphasis, etc.) even though there may be no conscious effort on their part.

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Flyy1 In reply to sheber [2011-10-08 15:14:44 +0000 UTC]

Food for thought...

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