Welcome to the Photography Forum's Monthly Challenge. This time
around the theme is Monochromatic Moondance... Exploring Color and
Light Choose a dominant color and go for it... e.g. White eggs on a
white bed sheet, red rose on a red satin pillow, gold jewelry on a
gold scarf, etc. The idea is to make an image that exemplifies the
subtle differences in hue, saturation and tonality by using members
of the same color family. B&W images are not what we are
looking for. The image must be in color. Entries will be accepted
until midnight February 28, 2003 GMT. Voting will begin on March
1st, 2003. Please check before the voting begins to make sure your
entry has been approved and is posted. For Challenge Series Rules
and Guide lines, please read below. If there are any questions
please feel free to post them in the Photography Forum, and either
Michelle A., or starshuffler will do their best to answer them.
Good luck to everyone, and have fun! Challenge Series
Rules... All entries must be comprised of original photographic
images created by the entrant. Post work in any photo editing
and/or paint program is acceptable and encouraged... However, the
use of royalty free images, or the addition of characters and/or
objects created in a modeling program is not. *This is a
photography contest* :) All images should be uploaded in JPEG
format at a resolution of 72 Pixels Per Inch. Images should be less
than 200 KB in file size. Images for each contest should be
photographed after the entry start date and before the finish date.
A limit of one entry per contestant. Images that do not conform to
the Renderosity TOS will be deemed ineligible and deleted.
Challenge Series Entry Guidelines.... Zone I is for advanced
intermediate, expert and professional photographers. People who
post to this level are usually experienced photographers. They are
shooting with prosumer, or better cameras, and generally have a
solid understanding and working knowledge of the basics of
photography. Zone II is for beginning and intermediate
photographers. This can be defined as still learning the basic
technical aspects of making good exposures, and/or learning the
basic concepts of composition. Their equipment can run the full
range of the spectrum from professional gear to point-and-shoot
cameras. Michelle A., and starshuffler