Hameister
New member
I've noticed most forums have a thread where people who enjoy taking digital photos can post their snaps. These threads are generally very successful and go on for years. There aren't a lot of rules. Just try to keep your photos under 300kb if possible, to preserve bandwidth.
Post anything you'd like. Your computer, your car, wildlife pictures, people, places, things, what ever. It goes without saying, that they should be in good taste, and hopefully of interest to others. If you have to ask, "what is good taste?", don't post it. If you'd like, you could give us a brief description of the photo, or information on your camera, and/or it's settings when the snap was taken. It's all up to you. Of course the photo you post should be taken by you, and not something you lifted from the Net.
That's about it....oh, one more thing, this is not the place for criticism, or lecturing on how a better photo could have been taken. Photographic advice should be given only when asked for, so that the photographer isn't made to feel that he/she, is being critiqued. All photos are welcome, whether taken by a $59.00 point 'n shoot, or a $2,000 DSLR. It's the subject matter that folks should be interested in, and not the technical quality.
I wish I could post a few snaps of my 2013 GS, but I'm still waiting on delivery. So, I'll kick things off with this photo I took about a year ago, not far from where I live.
Post anything you'd like. Your computer, your car, wildlife pictures, people, places, things, what ever. It goes without saying, that they should be in good taste, and hopefully of interest to others. If you have to ask, "what is good taste?", don't post it. If you'd like, you could give us a brief description of the photo, or information on your camera, and/or it's settings when the snap was taken. It's all up to you. Of course the photo you post should be taken by you, and not something you lifted from the Net.
That's about it....oh, one more thing, this is not the place for criticism, or lecturing on how a better photo could have been taken. Photographic advice should be given only when asked for, so that the photographer isn't made to feel that he/she, is being critiqued. All photos are welcome, whether taken by a $59.00 point 'n shoot, or a $2,000 DSLR. It's the subject matter that folks should be interested in, and not the technical quality.
I wish I could post a few snaps of my 2013 GS, but I'm still waiting on delivery. So, I'll kick things off with this photo I took about a year ago, not far from where I live.