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Wikipedia:Picture peer review/Archives/Jan-Jun 2007

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Please cut and paste nominations to be archived from the Picture peer review mainpage to the top of the appropriate archive page, creating a new archive (by nomination date) when necessary.

Metcalfe during qualifying for the second round at Brands Hatch of the 2007 Formula Renault UK season. The Brit qualified seventh.
Rotated, sharpened and cropped.

A good image, gives the viewer the sense of the speed even though that the category is entry level in open wheel racing; the article appears in Jeremy Metcalfe and possibly Formula Renault when that article is cleaned up; the original image was created by christianb_7 from Flickr.

Comments:

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Quartz crystal showing transparency.

I believe this image meets the criteria. It's a large size and resolution. It shows a unique property. It's used in Quartz and Transparency (optics). Created by commons:User:Zimbres, it has a creative commons license.

Comments:

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A composite image of the galaxy cluster Cl 0024+17 taken by the Hubble Space Telescope shows a gravitational lensing effect of a dark matter ring-like structure.

A truly beautiful ghostly composite image taken by the Hubble Space Telescope, when seen in hi-res you can see dozens of galaxies including some spiral galaxies much like our own. would make a nice featured picture; This image appears in the article about Dark matter ,created by NASA, ESA, M. J. Jee & H. Ford et al. (Johns Hopkins U.)

Comments:

  • This image is tiny compared to some of our recent NASA FPs. I'll try to upload the high-resolution version, but right now it seems like my computer is going to crash just opening it... I won't judge the actual picture until I can see how the high-resolution version looks, though. J Are you green? 23:17, 18 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I had no problem with the Full resolution 3921 × 3921 pixel image that you uploaded. nicely done btw, people will be able to easily make out many of the galaxies at that resolution, the lower thumbnail resolution of the image speaks to the gravitational lensing of dark matter. Sort of a two for one deal, Galaxies and Dark matter :) ▪◦▪≡ЅiREX≡Talk 06:52, 19 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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A necklace of white round pearls.

I think this pic should meet the criteria. It's of a size and resolution. It illustrates iridescence subtly but beautifully. It is used in Jewellery, Pearl, Necklace and Alpha Kappa Alpha. It is a pic from Flickr.com user "tanakawho".

Comments:

  • It might pass, but there are a few things that work against it. For one, pearl necklaces aren't extremely difficult to find and therefore a similar photo of higher resolution could be easily taken (the res does meet the criteria, but it's still rather small compared to some of the newer FPs). Also, it's a bit grainy, some of the necklace is cut off, and I find the coarse fabric background distracting. --Pharaoh Hound (talk) (The Game) 12:40, 18 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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Wikipedia:Picture peer review/Image:Shallow water waves.gif

Malibu

Photographed by Doug Dolde at dawn on Halloween, 2001 above Malibu, California. I found this image on the Malibu, California article.

Comments:

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A deckhand working at the Stavros S Niarchos's starboard main-topgallant yardarm. He is standing on both the main footrope and the flemish horse while re-reeving the sheet for the main-royal. The line passing diagonally behind his back is the starboard topgallant lift; the one apparently rising vertically to the top of the picture is in fact the brace pendant, running forwards to the foremast from which the picture was taken. There would normally be a line (the starboard main-topgallant clewline) running to the yardarm just visible at the bottom of the picture; this is missing because the yard is still being re-rigged after being brought down on deck for maintenance. Note that there is still no sail on the topgallant yard.
Edit by Thegreenj

I love this picture (ok, as the photographer and a keen square-rig sailor I'm doubly biased!) but I suspect others may not share my enthusiasm. I'm sure the photo-geeks will be able to pick many technical holes in it; in its defence is the fact that it's an action photo taken at sea rather than posed in a studio. It may be that the composition would be improved by cropping, but I rather like the way in which Colin is isolated in a big blue space in the original.

The caption explains the setting. The picture illustrates the fact that square-rigged sailing ships still exist and that the everyday work on them is the same as it ever was - 100 feet above the sea. It's also useful in a practical, encyclopaedic sense, clearly showing what a footrope and a flemish horse are and how they are used.

What do you think?

Comments:

  • I like it. However, I'd crop out the object at the very bottom. I think that would focus the photo onto the man instead of the ship, which is what I think your goal is here. Rwhealey 21:35, 22 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I also think the image would improve if the bottom was cropped so there was only sky. I think this would show the isolation of Colin much better. I like the image, but don't feel qualified to support or object the nomination as I'm still trying to figure out the criteria. Mehmet Karatay 12:16, 25 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks, both of you. I agree that slicing off the bottom of the picture to lose the upper-topsail yardarm would be an improvement - thankyou for pointing it out. Where I mentioned cropping above I had in mind reducing the shot right down to just the man and the gear immediately around him, which I think we agree would not be a good thing. PeteVerdon 12:39, 26 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Glad to be of help. One thing which may (or may not) improve the composition of the photo is to crop it to be square. Start at the top right and make the square as big as you can without including the upper-topsail yardarm at the bottom. See what you think. It might make the image more compositionally balanced while still keeping the sense of openness. Have a play. If that doesn't work simply remove the yardarm from the bottom as suggested earlier. Just a thought, and I unfortunately I know you can't really do anything about this, but I wonder if the featured picture review panel would complain about the face being in shadow? I hope not. Mehmet Karatay 14:18, 26 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I tried cropping it in a few ways - just plain slicing off the bottom, slicing off the left-hand side, and doing something a little bit like what you describe above, taking a bit off both. I also experiemented with removing the bits of ratline that intrude into the right-hand edge of the picture. I'm not really that keen on any of them; they all have the effect of zooming in on the sailor and reducing the void around him. Or maybe it's just that I'm too used to the full image, having had it sat on my desktop for weeks till I got round to uploading it.
Do you think it might be feasible to "airbrush" the topsail yardarm away? I don't know what the Featured Pictures orthodoxy has to say about such things, but if anyone more familiar with Photoshop / the Gimp fancies trying it I'd be interested to see the result. PeteVerdon 08:01, 31 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Cropping and face highlighting by Mehmet Karatay
I have a feeling that they wouldn't mind as long as it was a perfect job, but if it was at all obvious it would fail. Getting it perfect is well beyond my skill level I'm afraid. Mehmet Karatay 09:41, 31 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I tried a few crops for you and feel the best one I got was without the bottom yard-arm and ratline. I find those two items really distract from the image, as my eye explores their detail. This doesn't add to the feeling of openness or what is actually going on at all. I tried to make the image as large as possible, as I felt the square I suggested earlier didn't really work for this image. With this crop I like the pattern formed by the lines on the top right. I find this visually pleasing without being distracting. I also lightened the area of the face, leaving the rich saturated colours you have elsewhere.
The feeling of openness that you're after goes completely but I feel compostionally the image works well. Cropping and face highlighting by Mehmet Karatay
The other thing I feel worked was cropping the sky to the left out from my edited version. The feeling of openness you are after goes completely then I'm afraid but I think it does work compositionally. The main subject (the person) is shown clearly and the mind wonders what he is trying to achieve, how easy he is finding staying there etc.
My opinion is that the image definitely won't get featured with the bottom yard-arm and possibly the ratline. If you don't like the image without them, then maybe the image isn't of feature quality? Just a thought. Mehmet Karatay 09:41, 31 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I like both of those. Perverse, I know, since they're almost identical to ones I made myself, but since when was creativity strictly rational :-) . Presumably an FP candidate has to be a single photo? I can't decide which I prefer. PeteVerdon 18:30, 31 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
You can nomiate all of them as "alternatives." Just a word of warning, I don't think that you'll encounter too much enthusiasm over that picture - it's not amazingly exiting or informative. There's nothing wrong with it; it serves its purpose well, but I really just don't see the extra in it that makes it featured. By way, my personal preference is for the second crop. I added an edit because you colours are quite dull, and it's hard to discern detail in the shadow. P.S. if you're going to make an element of the picture vanish, please add a retouched photo tag. J Are you green? 02:41, 1 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]
And, just out of curiousity, who is "they," who you seem so inclined to impress? J Are you green? 02:52, 1 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I suspect you're right about the picture not really being Feature quality - I guess that's why I listed it here to gauge the enthusiasm of people other than me. Not quite sure what you're getting at with the "they" point - I've never used the term. PeteVerdon 01:18, 9 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]
"I have a feeling that they wouldn't mind as long as it was a perfect job..." That's Mehmet Karatay. I think I see, though. The voters, perhaps? J Are you green? 21:44, 2 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Just to touch on the question about photoshopping stuff out of pictures - the impression I've gotten on that page is that photoshopping to remove defects (correcting colour cast, removing dust specks, etc) is generally okay, but actually altering the portrayed object is not. See here or here for examples. Personally I would almost automatically object to any pic that had the offending bits wiped as being unencyclopedic. Crop, don't erase, IMO. Matt Deres 16:45, 12 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]


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File:La mota medina del campo (Valladolid).jpg
Medina del Campo Castle

A Commons picture I came across in Castle, put there by an anon, but originally taken by Dario sanz.

It depicts the imposing Castillo de la Mota in Medina del Campo, and its name refers to the motte or artificial mound common in a castle's early stages. This would be replaced by Late Medieval fortification, and this picture illustrates the major features of a castle superbly - turrets, gatehouse, moat, heavy curtain walls, machicolation and crenellation, etc. - thus making it a good picture for a core topic. Cesare Borgia was imprisoned there, and it was the first monumental building in Medina designated as a Heritage Site (Bien de interés cultural). It is especially appropriate for representing the castle article as an FP because it is in what was once the Kingdom of Castile (whose very name means "castle").

As a photograph, I was impressed by the striking image of snow on a Spanish castle - evocative of both Spanish castle architecture and the Meseta Central.

Comments:

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A Soap Bubble

Excellent Image, great quality. It's very colourful and pleasing to the eye. It appears in the article "Soap bubble", and it was created by brokenchopstick from Flickr.

Comments:

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The Vale of Health. This small hamlet (named "Hatchett's Bottom" until 1801), accessed via a small lane off East Heath Road, is surrounded entirely by the heath. It is now one of the most expensive residential areas in the world. In the background can be seen the Millennium Dome and the Canary Wharf complex of skyscrapers to the left, and the City of London to the right, with the North Downs visible in the background.

Slight WP:COI here since I took the photo, so I want to see what others think of it rather than jumping in and self-nominating. This image currently appears in the article Hampstead Heath, although at some point I intend to create a separate Vale of Health article. I feel this image serves its intended purpose well, in illustrating the way in which this small village, despite being entirely surrounded by (relatively) central London is completely cut off from the remainder of the city by parkland and steep hills. The high vantage point illustrates London's unusual geography, with the twin central business districts of London Docklands and the City of London both visible, and the steep hills of the North Downs at the southern edge of the city clearly visible in the background. BTW the sky's not overexposed - that is what the London sky looks like in spring.

Comments:

  • It's certainly a nice shot, but I don't think it's an FP candidate for two reasons. 1) Composition. The foreground is messy and distracting. The tree on the left, the stump with it's wood chips in the middle, are particular problems. Is the hill you were standing on taller? If so, you should be able to get higher up on it, putting more of the green in the middle ground, getting rid of the foreground, and seeing the city more completely above the trees. 2) Image quality. It isn't strikingly clear. I don't know what's going on with the leaves and the sky, but those transitions are distracting in the full version. In fact, the entire image isn't clear enough in the full version. The washed out background would probably be forgiven for being reality, but the middle-ground buildings are far, far too grainy. It's possible that you just need a down-sample, but I think the problems are more serious than that. The camera people might be able to give you advice on resolution, generally, but I can't. This particular image won't make it, but it's quite possible that you can get one from near that spot that will. Enuja 17:12, 10 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Just a note: I have edited the image. J Are you green? 16:07, 12 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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Fly Mimicking Wasp

No reasons given

  • Nominate and support. - Dingemansm 20:58, 8 May 2007

Comments:

  • Nice, but it:
  1. Needs to be in an article and
  2. Needs to be at least 1000 pixels in one dimension
Because of these two problems, it fails the Criteria. However, even if they were met, I suspect it would have trouble due to a very shallow DOF and a cut off subject. J Are you green? 20:28, 9 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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Working bees

It appears in honeybee article [[1]]. I got 2 beestings while taking this picture. But it shows very well how the bees carry the nectar.

Comments:

  • I doubt it would generate much support from FP editors. It's really not that striking an image, effective though it is at communicating the relevant information; it's rather small and the background is blurry and distracting. Daniel Case 13:21, 21 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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An Eastern Gray Squirrel cleaning his tail.

I think this picture would be great because you don't often see a picture of a squirrel doing this. I took this picture May 6th, 2007 and it really started to grew on me. I haven't edited this image at all.

Comments:

  • Sorry, but this really doesn't have much of a chance. I like to judge detail by seeing how far an image can be downsampled until it begins to loose detail to see the actual resolution - how much information there actually is as opposed to a pixel count. Unfortunately, I took it down to ~.7 megapixels without any real loss - that means that, by my observation, there really is only 1 pixel for every 9 pixels actually present in the photograph. It isn't your fault, but featured pictures really do make every pixel count. This seems to be the result of excessive in-camera noise reduction; if there is an option to turn it off, I would definitely consider doing so. It would get complaints about blown headlights and purple fringing. I love the picture, but I really don't think it will fare well at FPC. J Are you green? 20:42, 7 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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Frost Bank Tower

The Frost Bank Tower of Austin, Texas as seen from Congress Avenue.

I took this photo myself. The tower is one of only two towers in the world that uses the silvery blue glass facade. I felt that the Congress Ave. sign improved on the picture for two reasons; firstly because it identifies the tower in the picture, and secondly because Congress Avenue is in itself notable.

It is however a rather unusual view of the tower, as it looks much different from other angles. (See [2] and [3])

Comments:

  • I don't agree that Congress Ave. sign is a useful thing to have in the picture. I'm honestly not sure if any picture, from the ground, looking up at a modern glass-covered sky-scraper, would be a featured picture. Also, from the other pictures, this is a distinctive looking building. Any view that makes it look like a completely conventional skyscraper is unlikely to be featured. Look at the current featured pictures for architecture for an idea of what people expect. Other than the composition, some general tips follow. There is a lot of grain and noise in this picture, especially on the left face of the building. All vertical lines need to be vertical, not tilted (horizontal lines, like the horizon, should be horizontal). If the building on the left isn't a part of Frostbank tower, then it's also a distracting foreground item that might kill a featured picture candidate. Good luck on future pictures! Enuja 01:47, 9 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]
    • The reason that I felt that the Congress Ave sign was a positive thing is because it is a fairly significant street in Austin (as you can infer from the fact it even has a preexisting article) similar to that of Sunset Boulevard, Park Avenue, or 6th Street. I did consider the fact that this view did portray a slightly more conventional aspect to it, however as mentioned it is one of only two existing buildings with its unique type of glass. The building seen to the left side is indeed part of the same building. I do however entirely understand and appreciate your views on the picture, hence why I posted it here in the first place. I would like to hear further comments from others as well. --CMBJ 07:04, 9 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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Light Mantled Sooty Albatross

Appears on Sooty_Albatross. Fantastic detail and excellent profile. Taken by Vincent Legendre.

Comments:

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A cheeseburger.

Used in Cheeseburger, Culture of the United States, Cuisine of the United States, and Five paragraph essay.

Comments:

  • I am really curious to know where the metadata (0 second exposure at f/0 with a focal length of 0?!) came from. As for the photo itself, but this current nom is getting a relatively hard time with a much better done photograph. J Are you green? 21:05, 2 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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Abandoned bridge in Laholm, Sweden

I took this picture the other day. I would like to get some feedback from others on the picture. It appears in a gallery on the article on Laholm

Comments:

  • Comment - That's a nice image - you've found a pretty subject and the composition is pretty aesthetic. I might have been inclined to move slightly further to the left, to get a slightly more oblique angle on the bridge, but otherwise it's good. One thing that would hamper its chances at FPC is the overexposed sky and chromatic aberration around the treetops. Since you have an SLR camera, you can avoid this either by stopping down the exposure slightly (although that might introduce noise in the subject itself) or by using a circular polariser or a graduated neutral-density filter to reduce the brightness of the sky and increase its colouration. If you don't already have one of those, you should be able to pick them both up for not much cash from a photographic dealer. Alternatively, you could reshoot either early in the morning or later in the afternoon, when the sun is lower and the contrast between shadow and light isn't so strong. Those times of day also produce some attractive lighting, provided the surroundings don't make everything fall too deeply into shadow. --YFB ¿ 23:35, 1 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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Idea Leuconoe
Idea Leuconoe

Idea leuconoe Paper kite or Rice paper butterfly

I took this pic of a butterfly. I am pretty proud of it and I hope others like it too. I uploaded a cropped version aswell. (PS: this is the first time I do this with any pic so I hope I am doing this the right way.)

[:)]-|--<

Comments:

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Large menhir located between Millstreet and Ballinagree, Co Cork, Ireland

This a picture of a large single standing stone I recently added to the Menhir article. Its a crop of a larger image. I have been taking a number of pictures of megaliths, and more than anything I would appreciate some advice. Thanks.

Comments:

  • The image is pretty muddy from High ISO grain. This is pretty difficult to avoid in those lighting conditions without a tripod. Your camera used a fairly quick 1/1000 shutter speed so that there is no motions blur but at the expense of making the sensor very, well, sensitive, If you were to go back I would try taking it during the day or taking a tripod and manualy adjusting the ISO to 200 or 400. Its a good shot but not really up to FP quality. -Fcb981 03:58, 29 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Thanks, it was taken during the late afternoon of a good day in a rubbish summer. I'll go back, and incorporate thoes suggestions. Ceoil 04:18, 29 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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YOO Towers under construction in Tel Aviv, Israel.

This is a fairly high-quality image of the YOO Towers in Tel Aviv, Israel, and appears in the linked article. It was created by me in December 2006 (the towers are not yet completed so it doesn't require an update).

Any comments are appreciated and I will try to fix any flaws found asap.

Comments:

  • It does meet size requirements and granted it is of good quality, howerver, it fails to inspire me with wow factor. A good shot and I would guess 15% chance of passing. -Fcb981 06:33, 28 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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Visitors to the Hawk Mountain Sanctuary enjoy excellent views of migrating raptors in the fall. At upper center, the "River of Rocks" is a boulder field a mile long and up to 40 feet deep, deposited at the end of the last Ice Age.

This was my old digital snapshot camera's finest hour, and I thought it would be instructive to see how it would do in a review. I've used it to illustrate the article on Hawk Mountain.

  • Self-nomination. I'm guessing the main objection would be excessive sharpening (done within the camera) - should that be addressed by further software processing? - Mike Serfas 20:10, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Comments:

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View on the Namtso lake and the holy rock near the Tashi Dor monastery (2005)

I saw this picture and it was interesting enough to make me read the article it came from; Namtso, Peter Vigier.

Comments:

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2005 Ford Mondeo Ghia

The image stands out among automotive images, and is of exceptional quality. Image was created by User:DavidChief and appears in the Ford Mondeo article

Comments:

  • not bad, location is pretty good for a car shot. angle is good. Big problem is the blown sky and similar highlights on the roof of the car. That is the main problem. I would estimate it has a 5% or so chance of passing and only because of that. -Fcb981 02:00, 26 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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Difluoroethane droplets boiling away on brushed aluminum.

Stumbled across this on Flickr while looking for something else, created by user AMagill there while he was cleaning his computer case. Apart from the encyclopedic value of demonstrating how difluoroethane works to clean things up, I was just struck by so many things aesthetically: the contrasts between the splash of red and the gray/silver background, the soft gradient of the background, the sharp contrast lines of the more circular fluid drops and its general abstract beauty.

I checked the relevant articles (difluoroethane and Dust-Off) and knew they needed this. So I downloaded the largest version, cropped out some of the less successful elements, heightened the contrast and red color a bit. I figured it ought to have a chance at FP status. The original is here, with notes from the photographer, if anyone wants to see if they can do better with it.

Comments:

  • A few things: copyright status, it says some rights reserved on the origenal page, what are those exactly. Also, The crop is nice but it hurts the overall composition. It is hard for me to get context and understanding from the picture. At the full size, artifacts are also pretty bad and the second largest version didn't have them. And, correct me if i'm wrong, the picture is reproduceable and so maybe a better shot could be taken. personaly I doubt it would pass. -Fcb981 23:04, 24 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
It's CC-BY-2.0 ... in other words, a free image that we're allowed and encouraged to use (I don't troll any other Flickr photostreams besides that and CC-BY-SA-2.0 ... you can put that up here right away). Replaceability is not the issue here.

I took the largest version, artifacts and all, because I knew I was going to have to crop it and only the cropped version would be more than 1000px wide. (Besides, aren't we supposed to work with the biggest versions possible?). Regardless of size, the droplets at the outer edge of the picture are out of focus and blurred (and since they're smaller, it's a distracting mess as well). I couldn't keep them and have a picture worth nominating. Daniel Case 02:20, 25 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


Downsampled version

I think it is a good picture of the Bryce Canyon Amphitheater in Utah, USA. A version of this appears in Utah, Bryce Canyon National Park Amphitheatre, and Hoodoo (geology). I dropped the contrast and used a curves ajustment to pull out specific detail in this version.

Comments:

  • The edit looks better, good work with that. I would wait for a nom until your other hoodoo pic is finished. If that one passes you could give this a try but I personaly think the other one was better. -Fcb981 23:26, 13 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I still think it's a nice picture (I saw it on commons) but scaling down hasn't helped getting rid of OOF problem which was my only reason to oppose. Otherwise than that, I don't see why people would oppose. Blieusong 11:01, 14 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Actually, this version has not been downsampled yet. I'll do that soon. --Digon3 13:51, 14 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Done, second picture is the downsampled version. --Digon3 00:59, 17 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I like this shot, but I don't think it'd have much hope as an FP candidate. Despite the downsampling it's still very, very soft; since it's not a subject that's going anywhere in a hurry, people will want a better-quality image than this. If you compare to some of our other landscape FPs, you'll notice that they tend to have much higher detail at pixel level than is available in this photo. Can you go back and re-shoot, by any chance? It looks like your focus was off across the entire panorama. --YFB ¿ 00:50, 18 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I probably won't be going back there for a couple of years, but if I do I will definitly re-shoot--Digon3 00:55, 18 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
D'oh! Well, it's still a lovely photo and would look great on a wall, so don't be too put off. Thanks for contributing it anyway! --YFB ¿ 01:12, 18 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • It's certainly better than your current hoodoo candidate, but I think you might have trouble so soon after that one, even if you wait until the one is over. None of the current hoodoo pictures are featured, are they? Honestly, I'd wait about a month, and I think the downsampled version might make it. I love impressive views of nature, though, and am much less picky on really sharp, really high resolution nature views than many of the regular posters on featured picture candidates. Enuja 00:38, 20 April 2007 (UTC) You know what, on second thought, the foreground (hoodoo?) on the left will probably kill it. It's such a shame, as this is a fantastic shot. If you put it up, I'll vote for it, but I'm not confident it will pass. Enuja 00:45, 20 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I agree, the rock on the left was unneccessary. It has now been cropped. --Digon3 17:56, 20 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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Female aircraft worker checking assemblies in Burbank, California during World War II.

Good encyclopedic value, and beautiful picture--love that her red lipstick matches her red tool. Also love the contrast between her blouse and the armband/leather gloves. A nice complement to the Rosie the Riveter poster at FPC now. Background/hair might be considered too dark, but I like it because it highlights her paleness and delicate features.

In United States home front during World War II, uploaded by me, photo by FSA photographer David Bransby

Comments:

  • What's the blue spot above her head? It's a bit odd and distracting in the full version. I do think you're going to have trouble with the mostly-black composition at featured picture candidates, but I agree with you, it's really striking. Enuja 00:35, 20 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:

As above, but no UFO above her head
  • Support either - I added a version without the blue spot. --TotoBaggins 18:24, 21 June 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support second image: in the first image, the first thing that my eyes go to is the dot above her head, which distracts from the main subject, but that is remedied in the alternative image, so I support that one. It's a great photograph about women workers of WWII. --AutoGyro 04:30, 9 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]


A sweet violet (viola ordorata)

An image of a sweet violet that addresses the issues brought up with a previous sweet violet image (DOF and chromatic abberation). I'd love some detailed commentary before all the sweet violets are beginning to die off; a web search finds that they usually only last to the end of April, and it is beginning to become quite hard to find a decent example.

Comments:

  • I'll just leave them on Thegreenj's user page. -Fcb981 00:02, 17 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Take pictures on an overcast day; in the image page version, the purple looks too pale, and the center of the flower is in shadow. Is there still some fringing on the upper left petal? It's much better than the previous one, and beautiful, but not necessarily quite good enough. I'm not a photographer, so I'm totally making this one up, but I have a strange suggestion; could you shoot under a newspaper or something? If you aren't getting overcast days, maybe you could make one. Enuja 00:52, 20 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
On overcast days you tend to get much flater and toneless light. To my eye the lighting here is fine if not very good. -Fcb981 05:36, 20 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


Andalusian horse and rider demonstrating a Spanish walk.

I stumbled upon this video, and found it to be incredibly useful in explaining this riding term. I don't know if it's quite exciting enough or big enough to be a featured picture, so I figured I'd post it here to see what others thought.

It appears in Spanish walk and Jerez de la Frontera; it was created by User:Waugsberg.

Comments:

Seconder:


A close up of Yoshino Cherry Blossoms along the Tidal Basin in Washington, DC

Very high quality close up of Yoshino Sakura (Cherry) Blossoms. I am a little worried about possible blown highligts, and/or the flowers being too dark;

Appears in Sakura. I created the image, and it is licensed under the GDFL.

Comments:

  • It'll have a tough time passing with the messy background, distracting sky, and lack of contrast on the flowers themselves. Good shot, not quite FP quality. -Fcb981 06:08, 14 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:



  • I'm not sure how these would go on FPC since the body is cut off, the left-most one is currently on Com:qic and Com:fpc and seems to be going OK, But I would particularly like opinions on wether they're too dark or use of flash too obvious etc. and, of course, the merits of each one.--Benjamint444 04:30, 11 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • com:fpc nomination [[4]]


Comments:

  • The images are not to dark, the flash took care of that; and, while obvious the use of flash is not very distracting. The composition is of main concern and I would say could do with improvement. 3 looked best in that respect to me but tastes do very. Just the composition would make for a rough time in FPC. -Fcb981 23:24, 13 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


Woodlouse

[edit]
Slater rolled up in defensive pose

Comments:

  • It might pass, it does have artifacts all over the background and 'wow factor' is pretty, meh, but otherwise a good shot. My best guess is a 15% chance of passing. -Fcb981 23:14, 13 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


FN P90 submachine gun in hands of Cypriot National Guard during parade in Larnaca

Own photo made on 2005-03-25. It appears on FN P90, Fabrique Nationale de Herstal, Personal defense weapon and many similar articles in other language wikis

Comments:

Seconder:


Trango Towers

[edit]

I'm a newb here but this seems like a really cool picture. I checked out all the requirements and it seems to fit all of them. Unfortunatly I am too inexperienced to directly submit this for FP. Can anyone comment on this picture or help me do the proper submission?

Comments:

Seconder:


Maori student in Rotorua carving traditional Maori wooden carvings

Illustrates the act of Maori wood carving quite well, used in Maori culture

Comments:

Seconder:


File:Prairie Dog Washington DC.JPG
#1 A black-tailed prairie dog at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C., looks out from a system of tunnels, displaying its characteristic scanning of the horizon
#2 A black-tailed prairie dog at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C., forages for grass and leaves

Both created by Asiir. #1 is used as the main picture in the Prairie Dog article, replacing a low quality, small size government photo. There are currently no other pictures of this quality on the prairie dog page. I think this shows a prairie dog in a very familiar pose and is very illustrative of prairie dogs in general. My one concern is that the face is not quite in sharp focus.

2 is more in focus. Any comments on either? --Asiir 12:30, 16 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Comments:

Seconder:


Bryce Canyon Hoodoos Amphitheater Panorama

I think it is a good picture of the Bryce Canyon Amphitheater in Utah, USA. It appears in Utah, Bryce Canyon National Park Amphitheatre, and Hoodoo (geology)

Comments:

Should it be decreased or increased? --Digon3 13:41, 14 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]
I need to know in order to improve it... --Digon3 00:03, 4 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Idk how much gain can be made but I think droping the contrast and then using a curves ajustment to pull out specific detail is your best bet. -Fcb981 17:07, 7 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


Looking northward on the Buffalo Bayou in George Bush Park.

It seems very well done, pleasing, and gives an example of the swamp of Houston, Texas. George Bush Park, by JuWiki

Comments:

Seconder:


A panorama of the north shore mountains in Vancouver

I think this picture is pretty good. I used (a trial version of) Panorama maker 4 to stitch 11 images together. The result is a complete view of the mountains. The picture itself was taken from Canada Place in downtown Vancouver.

Comments:

Seconder:


Flowers of the Saw Banksia, Banksia serrata
Cropped Version (edit 1)

This is a photograph of the Saw Banksia, Banksia serrata in flower. It shows both the characteristic inflorescences of the Banksia genus, and the toothed leaves from which it gets its common name. It is one of the more common (and showy) Banksias of the east coast of Australia. Photo taken in Broadwater National Park by myself.

Comments:

  • The focus and angle are great on the plant as are the lighing and and exposure. what I have trouble with is the other plant in the top left and the messy background both may have been impossible to avoid but they are pretty distracting. This is a close one, keep it up. -Fcb981 16:27, 3 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • The sky in the upper left is somewhat distracting, but I think it is close enough to give it a try. Royalbroil T : C 04:48, 11 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I've cropped the image to focus on the Inflorescence and maintain leaf character within the image Gnangarra 07:23, 1 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


Edit 1 -Fcb981

This is an image of American cricketer John Barton King. He is arguably the best cricketer in this country's history and his article is nearing the point of Featured Status (finishing up last Peer Review before FAC). The image is high resultion, but the photograph was a little on the old side. It is a unique picture of fairly good quality. With a couple edits for minor things, I think it could be a Featured Picture of a man that has been dead for more than 40 years (so there is no chance of getting any more pics out of him. This was taken during his prime in the early 1900s. Thanks so much.

Comments:

  • Thanks for the comment. I'm fairly uninvolved in FPCs, so I'm not too sure about the requirements and things. This image can be found in various other places at low resolution, but The folks at the CC Morris Cricket Library just found the original in a book and get a high resolution image for me. I think this is as good as it's ever going to get and it's almost one hundred years old now. It's in pretty good shape with just a few dust spots and stuff.--Eva bd 15:13, 21 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Sounds good to me. make sure you include that information in your nom if you put it up for FP (which you should do). good luck -Fcb981 15:41, 21 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • You haven't put this version in the article, yet. That's an important first step before nominating the picture. Also, I think the different tones in the picture will kill it, as while this is a historic picture, it isn't a historic moment (it's the person, not this particular swing, that the picture is communicating). The damage on the other, lower quality scans looks to be different, as well, making me wonder if the different tones are not damage to the actual photograph, and if a better high resolution version could be found. Enuja 02:42, 22 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • This has now been put up for consideration at FPC. You can find the subpage here. Thanks!--Eva bd 12:50, 23 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


Carpenter using a brace and bit, Tennessee, 1942.

Just what a carpenter should look like, great shot. So detailed you can actually see beads of sweat dripping down his face if you zoom in.

In Carpenter, Brace (tool), Drill, Construction worker, Overall, Hard hat. Uploaded by me, photo by FSA photographer Alfred Palmer.

Comments:

  • I just put myself on an enforced wikibreak so i can't create any new pages (which I need to nominate these). Can someone put these two images on the FPC page for me? 140.247.250.128 15:39, 17 April 2007 (UTC) (This is Calliopejen1.)[reply]
  • In it's current state, this won't pass featured picture candidacy. There is too much dust and such, and it's far to fuzzy. I can't do it, and people at FPR might be willing to, but it needs some serious dust removal. It's also huuuuge, so have you tried to downsample it? If you keep both dimensions above 1000 - 1500 px, I don't think anyone will complain about it being too small, but as is, I'm certain people will complain about it being too fuzzy. You can see the sweat, but it's not crisp sweat. Enuja 00:27, 20 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • It could use a 1/2 downsample and some dust removal but more than that and you wont get any particular gains. On this one a curves and levels adjustment will help tons and I almost did it myself however more things may be brought up on the FPC. Given the historical nature of the shot It shouldn't have a problem passing. In this case let the editing occur at the FPC. -Fcb981 05:31, 20 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


Larrys Creek Covered Bridge (also known as Buckhorn Covered Bridge) over Larrys Creek in Cogan House Township, Pennsylvania, USA

This picture is the lead image in Larrys Creek, a Featured Article, and is also used in Cogan House Township, Pennsylvania and History of Lycoming County, Pennsylvania. It seems to meet the requirements for WP:FPC and this potential nomination was suggested to me by Dincher. I took the picture myself in March, 2006.

Comments:

  • support As the person who suggested that it be nominated in the first place I feel like I should give my reasons for believing that it is a potential nominee. I really like the simplicity of it. The photo shows the structure of the bridge. I shows how the bridge works from an exterior view. Most covered bridges look quaint and rustic, but the photos don't show the arch that is the key to holding the bridge. This photo does. As an added bonus the photo also shows the affects that a creek has on the creek bank. Note that Larrys Creek is in it's normal stream bed in this photo, but that the affects of the recent winter melt can be seen in the grasses that have been flattened on the creek bank. Now, I know very little about photography so I can't comment on the qualities of the photo, but the subject is, to me, very interesting. Looking at the picture tells me a story. Dincher 05:43, 5 April 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


3-4 Year old Great horned owl, taken in Balsam Mountains, North Carolina. Bird is currently in rehabilitation after sustaining a wing injury from colliding with a car.

This is an excellent image; it has a spectacular subject, and is pleasing to the eye. It contributes to the article it's in, and helps illustrates the bird very well. I also believe the image meets all of the technical requirements of a FP. This image appears in the Great Horned Owl article, and was created by Peter Manidis (Falxuis).

If the image meets with success here, I'd like to nominate it for Featured Picture status, but I'm afraid I'm still quite new to Wikipedia, and I have found the process quite complicated. So if someone would like to nominate the image there (if it is granted an acceptable status here), I'd greatly appreciate it.

Comments:

Seconder:

  • It's good enough, I think. It may have problems with the subject being cut-off and it could use an edit to take out the hot pixel and smudges (lens artifacts?) on the background but i'd say 60% chance of an edit passing. -Fcb981 04:24, 25 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]


Uranium has a high number of electrons; this diagram shows how they are arranged.
An electron shell is a group of atomic orbitals with the same value of the principal quantum number n. Electron shells are made up of one or more electron subshells, or sublevels, which have two or more orbitals with the same angular momentum quantum number l. Electron shells make up the electron configuration of an atom. It can be shown that the number of electrons that can reside in a shell is equal to .

This peer review is for a set of images, the entirety of which can be found here. While any one alone is obviously unworthy of featured status, together, the clarity that they demonstrate the concept of the electron shell (stemming from simplicity) may be worth "featured set" status. The set is comprehensive and uniform; they are all SVGs; the author for all of them is Pumbaa (original work by Greg Robson); they are all under the same acceptable license. Most do not appear in any article, but the sodium image appears in electron shell and neon appears in noble gas. I put up Uranium because it's a fairly well known element that has a high number of electrons; hydrogen makes a more natural "lead" image. There's not really much that can be done to improve these images, especially on the scale of over 100 images, without losing the simplicity. Such, I only want to gauge the community's reaction.--HereToHelp 13:21, 16 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Comments:

  • Wow, I'm really impressed with this set -- good find. I especially like the periodic table form of the set. That said, I think some of the scientist types might complain that this way of displaying them distorts the true size of the electron shell and the nucleus, relative to one another (as is already pointed out in the caption, I believe). I don't know how that would affect nomination, since there is no realistic way to fit them all if they were to scale. Still, I think with that caveat made clear, it might have a shot at FP. Any other physics people have suggestions? --Asiir 02:59, 17 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I like the periodic table version too, but it's not an SVG. But it is 7022 × 4967, which is big enough to make a poster out of. So close enough. Also, it shows the nucleus as a circle, rather than a clump of neutrons and protons. But the nucleus isn't what's being focused on, so it's passable.--HereToHelp 17:02, 17 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


Partial panorama of the Nā Pali Coast from sea

I thought this was a good panorama picture especially after I got help fixing it up, and I wanted to know what others thought. The picture appears in Nā Pali Coast article and the Kauai article. I created the picture but User:MattWright fixed it up a lot. Remember 19:25, 30 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]


Comments:

  • My first impression is of a colourful photo, maybe should be extending a little bit more on the right. This being a stitched image, was the photographer stationary on firm ground or on a boat? How much did the boat move? I am sorry to say that I see stitching bugs, one is the discontinuous coast one third to the right, from the irregular blue in the sky it appears to me that photos of different exposure have been used uncorrected, I also suspect that lens vignetting has contributed to the unevenness. At least I do not spot a visible seam in the wave pattern.--Klaus with K 15:24, 31 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:

Comment



Two guinea pigs.

Nomination I found this picture and it is amazing!! The two guinea pigs are so cute!! Is there anything that the picture needs to make it better? Here is the picture:

Daniel10 15:45, 27 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

  • Comment. I doubt it will pass FPC. The red-eye in the left guinea pig would have to be corrected, and the white balance is off (the picture is too red). The image has noticeable jpg compression, ans thus is not particularly sharp. There is also some colour noise on the background. Unfortunately, "cuteness" is not part of the FP criteria, and isn't valued in FP (though if a picture is good quality and cute, that's quite all right). It's a nice photo, but it's not high enough quality for FPC, sorry. --Pharaoh Hound (talk) 13:47, 28 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  • Comment The left guinea pig is an albino, they naturally have very red eyes. -- anonymous 14:51, 24th of January 2007
  • Strong Support A very good quality picture such as this deserves to be featured. Since lots of people have supported it, I'll change it to featured picture.
  • Strong Oppose It doesn't matter whether the guinea pigs are cute but whether or not it is an excellent picture that shows Wikipedia's best quality in pictures. There's white splotches on the picture and I cannot even seen the whole entire body of both of the guinea pigs.--¿Why1991 ESP. | Sign Here 20:59, 3 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Strong Support. you guinea-pig haters are cruel. --Ghetteaux 10:36, 4 January 2007 (UTC


Hospital ship USNS Mercy (T-AH-19), anchored off of the coast of Jolo City.

I found this image a while back and loved it. It seems so fitting a Hospital ship sitting under the rainbow, it makes it seem so peaceful. I belive this picture meets the Featured picture criteria.

This image is listed on the articles United States Navy, USNS Mercy (T-AH-19) and Portal:United States Navy. The image was taken by Chief Photographer's Mate Edward G. Martens, USN

Comments:

Seconder:


Singer/songwriter Sufjan Stevens playing banjo.

I stumbled upon this image a few days ago. It was originally too small to be considered for FP, but the photographer recently uploaded a higher-res version.

I understand that in an ideal world, there are a few things that could be fixed in this photo, but for the most part these are known limitations that are particular to concert photography. These issues include:

  • Lighting does not highlight the face well enough (Maybe this can be fixed with some photoshop?)
    • Because of this, thumbnail image does not show subject well if it's not big enough.
  • It is a little out-of-focus around the hands, or possibly blurry due to the motion of playing the banjo
  • It is also somewhat grainy, due to the [necessarily] high ISO setting (800)

That said, I still think that [with a little touch-up], this could be FP because:

  • The composition is fantastic - the colors incredible, the placement is artistic, the focus is great
  • The subject is very well depicted. I've never really listened to Sufjan Stevens before, so I listened to a few tracks on iTunes. His music is very solemn, quiet, and thoughtful. The look on his face is very illustrative of this type of music.

This image is listed on the article for Sufjan Stevens, and was taken by User:Jlencion.

Comments:

Seconder:

  • Second and support - have I got the format right? I don't know anything about the picture peer review process, but was struck by the beauty of this photograph and wanted to compliment its creator. Dybryd 04:47, 22 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support - yes, very nice; might benefit from a bit of a gamma adjustment to make the fact brighter. Picture Peer Review seems pretty much dead, so I'd recommend nominating it over at WP:FPC to get proper feedback on it. TSP 17:49, 22 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Due to its low cost and close visual likeness to diamond, cubic zirconia has remained the most gemologically and economically important diamond simulant since 1976.

I think this stands up to Featured criteria. It has a decent resolution and beautiful lighting refractions. It's used in Zirconium, Cubic zirconia, Zirconium dioxide, and Diamond simulant. It was originally uploaded in 2004 by User:Hadal.

Comments:

Seconder:


A scattering of "brilliant" cut diamonds shows off the many reflecting facets.

I believe this lives up to all the criteria. It is definitely of a high resolution and quality. The differing angles give good perspective. It is the lead pic on an FA, Diamond, as well as on Jewellery, Brilliant (diamond cut), and quite a few others. It was photographed by Mario Sarto, and seems to have been uploaded by commons:User:HenryLi.

Comments:

Seconder:


Church of the Holy Trinity (built 1857–1862), Asenovgrad, Plovdiv Province, Bulgaria

A photo of a beautiful Eastern Orthodox church in a southern Bulgarian city. It is a great example of 19th-century ecclesiastical architecture in the Bulgarian lands. Available under a free Creative Commons license, the author is Nenko Lazarov. High-resolution. Currently only used in the Asenovgrad article, but may fit well in church, Orthodox church (building), Bulgarian National Revival, Plovdiv Province, etc.

Comments:

Seconder:


A Few Good Men at London's Theatre Royal Haymarket in 2005.

Add your reasons for nominating it here; say what article it appears in, and who created the image.

Comments:

Seconder:


The harbor of Kem.

Self-nomination. I'm not quite sure this picture meets the criteria, so I would like to hear some feedback. As I'm not very technical, the criteria themselves are difficult for me to understand. This picture appears on Kem (town) and Karelia.

Comments:


Seconder:


The Horses of Saint Mark

Self-nomination. I'm not quite sure this picture meets the criteria, so I would like to hear some feedback. As I'm not very technical, the criteria themselves are difficult for me to understand. This picture appears on Chariot racing, Quadriga, Republic of Venice, Horses of Saint Mark and History of the Republic of Venice.

Comments:

  • As artistic as this is i doubt it will pass fpc for a few reasons. the subjects (the horses) are cut off which people will harp on you for. If you look at the hoves and noses of the horses you will see that the harsh lighting has turned them white. this is refered to as 'blown highlight' where all detail is lost in a bright reigon. there is grainieness in the sky and elsewhere. there is lens flare on the right side of the picture. the composition is not great because of verious unrelated objects on the right of the picture. The angle I do like somewhat though. -Fcb981 23:21, 19 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


Bryce Canyon Hoodoos

Appears in Hoodoo (geology) and Bryce Canyon National Park. I think it is a good close-up picture of hoodoos. Created by Digon3.

Comments:

Seconder:


Bandstand Promenade

Bandstand Promenade is a kilometer long walkway along the sea on the west side of Bandra, a suburb of Mumbai, India. Less than a decade old, it is simultaneously a popular hang out spot, a jogging track and a park.

This picture was self shot with Nikon Coolpix S10. It appears in an article with same name.

Comments:

Seconder:


BMC Headquaters, Mumbai

Image of Historic building of Brihan Mumbai Municipal office. Architecture depicts Anglo-British style. Shot taken by myself from CST. Camera- Coolpix S10

Comments:

Seconder:


[[Image:===Cathedral Rocks===

The Cathedral Rocks at sunset

A very nice picture of Yosemite Valley. This picture shows the sheerness of the granite cliffs; Appears in Yosemite Valley page, created by myself.

Comments:

  • wow, what a beautiful sceen + composition. It is just too blury however. like the camera wasn't still when it was taken or the focus is off. -Fcb981 00:25, 20 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I downsampled it in photoshop 50% and it looks stunning and is over the size requirements. If I were you I's upload a about 40% reduction (60% of the origenal size) and nominate it for fpc. It would have a chance.-Fcb981 07:04, 21 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


Bohemian Switzerland

It looks like a gate to the Bohemian Switzerland a Czech scenic reserve, picture shows a gate in the middle of the forrest near the holy place with cross. It appears in Bohemian Switzerland article and I am the author of that picture.

Comments:

Seconder:


St Mary's Church, Brownsea Island

This is a photograph of St Mary's Church on Brownsea Island in Poole, Dorset. The photo depicts the south west side and south side of the church. It is in the Brownsea Island Article.

Comments:

Seconder:


Enterprise patrols the Persian Gulf in support of Operation Desert Fox.

Striking image that caught my eye as I was reading USS Enterprise (CVN-65), but I was unsure on its possibility of becoming an FP; Appears in USS Enterprise (CVN-65), and was made by Petty Officer 1st Class Todd Cichonowicz.

Comments:

Seconder:


A captive Saker Falcon used for falconry in Qatar

A high res, sharp image of an endangered species. Used in falconry. Uploaded from Flickr, see the image page for source info.

Comments:

Seconder:


The Lincoln Memorial in Washington DC.

If I took the time to fix the stitching issues and re-rendered this 30000x10000px original beast out, would it stand a chance?

Comments:

Seconder:


Fire hydrant on the Downtown Mall in Charlottesville, Virginia.
Photoshop edit light in window, cropped right side to remove distracting bit.

I submit this image for peer review because it's an image that even I was taken back by when looking through my take of photos from a trip to Charlottesville. I think it potentially says "featured image" on it, but I'm wondering what others think about the subject. It is presently the lead image in fire hydrant.

Comments:

  • Focus is a bit soft and I think I see fringing. Would also prefer daytime lighting and a dry hydrant. —Dgiest c 08:39, 4 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • I like it. I love the water on the hydrant, it adds a realism to the whole thing. My only negative comment would be about the light reflected in the window in the background. I think you could crop that out, but it might destroy the rest of the picture. Rwhealey 22:46, 26 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]
    • I believe someone talented with photoshop could fix that reflection with little problem. SchuminWeb (Talk) 02:12, 27 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]
      • I took a stab at it. I think the file size is now pretty huge. sigh. It's a nice photo. Hmm, it's looks darker too, and not as good as the original, except that weird light in window. What was that about? Was it to add lighting to the hydrant? lol - Jeeny (talk) 22:44, 3 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
        • That weird light in the window is one of the hazards of nighttime photography, I'm afraid - it was a reflection of the light from a nearby lamppost. SchuminWeb (Talk) 00:06, 4 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]
          • It looked like it was sticking out from behind the blinds, because the blinds where bent. At least that's what it looked like to me. But, I've been up all night... so I could be seeing strangs things, ya know? :) - Jeeny (talk) 00:58, 4 December 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


Antwerpen Stadhuis


This is the Antwerpen Stadhuis. As the photographer I like the sunlight illuminating the building on a mostly cloudy day with a rather short time window to take the two photos for this stitched image.

Comments:

Seconder:


Enterance to Waterfront Statiom

I took this picture and I liked the outcome. I would say it's my best one.

Comments:

Seconder:


Rio Celeste

Appears in Tenorio Volcano National Park. Good illustration of the claim: The park is known for the light blue hued Rio Celeste, the colouration being caused by sulphur and calcium carbonates. Taken and uploaded by User:Asequeir

Comments:

Seconder:


Some Ducks

I like the amount of detail; found in: Domesticated duck and Duck, and Created by yours truely, Photonikonman 13:57, 22 January 2007 (UTC).[reply]

Comments:

  • Unfortunately, I am very confident that it wouldn't pass FPC. The image has been severely oversharpened, it doesn't show all of any of the ducks (lower encyclopedic value), and the white duck is quite distracting. --Pharaoh Hound (talk) 12:58, 26 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


A reservoir glass filled with a naturally colored verte next to an absinthe spoon.

Picture has fine detail and beauty, a good close up, and with the blurred background, the focus of the picture is directed completly at the glass. Appears in Absinthe artile, author is Eric Litton

Comments:

  • Unfortunately it is far too small. FPs need to be at least 1000 pixels on the smallest side, this image is 600 pixels on the largest side (height). --Pharaoh Hound (talk) 13:00, 26 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • Size is definitely a factor here. Also, the spoon goes all the way to the bottom...to the point where it looks like it's being cut off. A minute detail, but I'm sure it will get brought up in FPC. Otherwise, this is a fantastic shot, I love it! tiZom(2¢) 01:44, 10 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


Diagram to show the vastness of our universe. Details the inner solar system, the outer solar system, the orbit of comet Sedna and the beginnings of the Oort cloud

Attractive, large image showing to scale the distances between objects in our solar system. However, needs conversion to SVG before nomination. Compare with this image The extent of the oort cloud of the extent of the Oort cloud. Makes you feel small...

Appears in: Oort cloud / Solar System / 90377 Sedna / Outer Solar System

Comments: This image used to be an animation. Any idea where the animation got to? Oh wait; found it. Serendipodous 15:21, 30 May 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


Starlifer contrail (original)
Starlifer contrail (after edit)
Edit 2 by Fir0002

This isn't a nomination- just a request for comments before I guess this gets taken to the delist noms. This picture was extremely grainy so I ran a despeckle and reduce noise. The contrails look much better now but the plane has lost its sharpness. What should I do with this? Run the filters on everything but the plane? Also, in the future should something like this go to peer review or direct to delist? --frothT 10:43, 14 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I guess I'm trying to find consensus on whether the change should be adopted --frothT 22:17, 14 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Comments:


Yabbarra Beach in Dalmeny on the south coast of NSW, Australia

I'm very proud of this picture. I have taken quite a few pictures for Wikipedia (you can see some of them here) and I think this picture is one of my very best. It was taken from on Yabbarra Beach in the Australian south coast town of Dalmeny, New South Wales. It was taken at about 7.30am, and because it is an east facing beach, the sun is just rising. The sky is clear and waves are rolling up the beach. The water is a very nice blue. The picture was taken with this camera.

It features in the Dalmeny article, and when I update My Pictures page it will be there too. I created this image. For more details, visit the of this picture.

I hope you like the picture, and look forward to reading your comments.

Comments:

  • Unfortunately, the image quality is not great. It shows noticeable compression at full resolution, and is somewhat blurry. Seashores are one of the difficult subjects to get through FPC as it is generally easy to shoot a similar image with a better camera, therefore seashore images normally have to be truly exceptional in rarity or quality. This image is quite nice, but I don't feel that it is FP quality. --Pharaoh Hound (talk) 13:07, 26 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


The Crystal Method

Taken by me, appears in The Crystal Method. I've always considered it one of the best pictures I've ever taken, but is it good enough for WP? I'm a Featured Picture noob, so I'm asking here before I post it as a canidate.

Comments:

  • Sorry, but this picture isn't very good. The room is dark and the reddish colors don't look nice. The man on the right's face is hidden and it doesn't truly illustrate the topic enough to be encyclopedic. Don't waste your time nominating it for FPC and Try to take another picture. I'm sure you have great potential. Sorry, Reywas92TalkSigs 23:11, 15 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


Panorama of Partington Ridge near Big Sur, California.

I am nominating this panoramic photograph beacuase of its dramatic view, panoramic aspect, vibrant colors and sharp image quality. A set of pictures that I took and then stitched them together using Autostitch [5].

Comments: It would be more "dramatic" if the top of the tree was not cut off. PhotoNikonMan 12:57, 31 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


The Great Wall of China. This image was taken near Beijing in the wintertime.

I found this image on today's featured article, Invasion. It is also used in the articles Megastructure, Great Wall of China, and New Seven Wonders of the World. It was uploaded to Commons by one Andreas Tille, the photographer. I personally find it very striking. I like how the wall curves over the hills. He must have been quite far away to get so much of it in the picture, yet it looks like you could reach out and touch it. The color has good contrast, with the patches of snow clearly distinguishable from the grass and bare rock and dirt. It gives a good impression of the sheer size of the thing. I don't notice any compression artifiacts or blown highlights. The high-res version is 2048x1299, so it should be big enough. I think it's among the best work on Wikipedia, otherwise I wouldn't be interested in nominating it. It's licensed under the GFDL. It adds value to all of the articles it's used in. It's accurate. I wouldn't be nominating it if I didn't find it pleasing to the eye. The one problem is the caption. Most places where it's used the caption is just something like, "The Great Wall near Bejing in winter" but that's easy enough to fix if other people think the picture itself is FP worthy. Lots can be written about the Great Wall if it is to appear on the Main Page. Lastly, it doesn't seem to be promoting any particular POV.

I'm sending it to peer review to see if others think that it's FP worthy because last time I found an image and nominated it for FP I got a little burned (I didn't know how to find out the size of the image. It looked big so I thought it was big.). If it's not up to the standards let me know, but be nice about it.

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Seconder:


The Bran Castle, located in Romania, is commonly associated with the fictional Count Dracula.

I like the framing and the structure of the castle itself. I haven't modified the picture at all from the camera, let me know how it should be modified. Appears in Bran Castle, and was taken by me, User:KyleT.

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Seconder:


A peculiar looking cloud formation

I took this picture, of what appears to be a poodle made by clouds in July and I found it funny, since people always argue about what the clouds "look like"; Please, help me specify what type of cloud this is.

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Seconder:


Kepler Track alpine ridgeline, New Zealand

Here is a pic I took early last year whilst trekking on the Kepler Track in New Zealand. I really like the way the clouds are building up on one side of the ridgeline and the almost silhouetted figure of my mate. Unfortunately I cannot upload a larger size .. it was taken on my little happy snap Canon that I was carrying along the track.

Comments:

  • I'm not sure if it would make it on FPC, there's some pixelation on the mountains. You may want to try it on Quality images candidates on the commons (shortcut COM:QIC). It's an impressive and beautiful picture, but recently standards on FPC are almost insanely high. However, that being said, if possible rejection doesn't phase you, it may be worth trying on FPC. --Pharaoh Hound (talk) 12:57, 11 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


A grasshopper on a beer bottle

Very high quality picture that I took when a grasshopper landed perfectly on a beer bottle. I shows a crisp look and detail of the grasshopper on the bottle.

Comments:

  • Uhhh how is a grasshopper on a beer bottle better than a grasshopper in its natural habitat? The beer bottle vastly reduces the enc. of the picture and may also infringe copyright since the packaging is copyrighted. Otherwise a reasonably good picture, try zooming or going a bit closer to the grassshopper to capture more detail. --antilived T | C | G 09:40, 4 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • 'I agree with the above. The image is okay technically but the fact that the grasshopper is out of its natural habitat...and on a beer bottle, this image would probably never survive a FPC. — Arjun 14:56, 5 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:

Noncommissioned Officers Mess of Company D, 93d New York Infantry - Bealeton, VA, Aug 1863

I uploaded this image, and it's used on Union army. I think it is a very expressive photo, and very representative of the American Civil War. I think the one problem with this might be the "217" in the bottom left corner, but this can be edited out. This image is from another website, but due to its age (144 years) it is public domain. Please view full size for all the details.

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  • Comment This is a historical photo, so if it had something unique about it, say Lincoln smiling, it would pass. However, since it's just a picture of unremarkable people doing unremarkable things, I don't think it's really feature worthy at any resolution. There are more than enough civil war photos with more interest.--Niro5 16:55, 2 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Seconder:


Mires seen in Applanation tonometry

I took this photograph through a slit-lamp during applanation tonometry. I have not found any similar photographs anywhere and I think it will be useful to students of Ophthalmology to know what the end point should be in Applanation tonometry. Any feedback on whether it deserves to be in the FPC list? This picture comes in the article Tonometry

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Seconder:


Wikipedia:Picture peer review/Natural iron hot spring.jpg

King of the Sky

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Tried a shot of the sun, now in spring when it's not so powerfull. Really liked it and i wanted to share the view that all to see that sun is the same here in Romania :).

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Seconder:


Saturn and Earth

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This is not only a breathtaking picture but it is informative. It shows the relative sizes of Earth and Saturn. It is high resolution and of good quality. I would appreciate feedback as well as help posting it on the featured picture candidates page.

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Seconder:

I don't know how to submit this picture, but it's pretty awesome. See water droplet below the picture of Saturn.