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Coffe Time. Part II


XVarior

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Douma is one of few places in Lebanon that has managed to preserve it's authentic village-spirit. Here, a charming cafe  were retired men gathers for cards and backgammon games. A freshly boiled coffee is about to be served.


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B&W above or Color, which one do you guys prefer?

I'm having tough time choosing with this one!

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Glad to see this wonderful shot working here! ;)

Both look nice, but in this case maybe the color version is working better for me. It has more warmth that goes better with that smile, and I also like the "blue" colors that gives really nice tones to the shot.

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Glad to see this wonderful shot working here! ;)

Both look nice, but in this case maybe the color version is working better for me. It has more warmth that goes better with that smile, and I also like the "blue" colors that gives really nice tones to the shot.

Thanks Louis, me too I'm more attracted to the original color version this time. as you said, the blue nuances here and there but also that cinema-paradiso look that is due to an amazing late afternoon light and the old warm bulbs illuminating the cafe.

Thanks for helping chose, eddds voted B&W, let's hope to hear more from our dear forum members :-).

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I prefer the colour rendition as the blue theme works so well all the way from the lighter blue in the wall (on the right edge) through the bright blue in the cofee cup to the blue jeans and shirts worn by the patrons.

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I prefer the colour rendition as the blue theme works so well all the way from the lighter blue in the wall (on the right edge) through the bright blue in the cofee cup to the blue jeans and shirts worn by the patrons.

Glad to know, color is winning here.

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Hmmmm... interesting.

 

I loved the B&W when I first saw it.... then the colour picture came on screen and I agree with (nearly) everyone else, the blues in their jeans, the blue of the coffee cup and the blue of the table contrast very well with the warm tones elsewhere and changes the whole feel of the picture. It seems warm and friendly and slow...

 

Can't help thinking the B&W picture would stand the test of time as an image though... so I'm sitting on the fence a while. 

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Hmmmm... interesting.

 

I loved the B&W when I first saw it.... then the colour picture came on screen and I agree with (nearly) everyone else, the blues in their jeans, the blue of the coffee cup and the blue of the table contrast very well with the warm tones elsewhere and changes the whole feel of the picture. It seems warm and friendly and slow...

 

Can't help thinking the B&W picture would stand the test of time as an image though... so I'm sitting on the fence a while. 

That's a very nice feedback "sitting on the fence" I was trying to find a description of the state of my mind regarding this image and now you found it for me :-)

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Both are quite lovely.  In B&W the focus around his eyes is a bit soft, but it seems less so in color.

Your right Stuny, for B&W, I'll develop differently, giving more pop to the foreground and less to the surrounding so to bring the coffee maker to life.

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I love this photograph either way. For a print on my wall, I think b&w would be better, but in a book, I think of color with a wide white border. Fine work!

 

Larry

Your feedback perfectly summarise  it all Larry. 

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A lovely picture -- and I think the B&W wins (not that it's a competition, of course). The subject, lighting and textures all seem to work better in B&W to my eye... Or perhaps, what I mean is that the seem more suited to, more fitting in B&W. I suppose in a way it is the kind of picture one almost expects to see in B&W. Now, that might be a good argument for the colour version -- simply to confound expectations! But to my eye, I still love the B&W.

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A lovely picture -- and I think the B&W wins (not that it's a competition, of course). The subject, lighting and textures all seem to work better in B&W to my eye... Or perhaps, what I mean is that the seem more suited to, more fitting in B&W. I suppose in a way it is the kind of picture one almost expects to see in B&W. Now, that might be a good argument for the colour version -- simply to confound expectations! But to my eye, I still love the B&W.

Thanks for this analysis Alun, interfering point of view.

I re-edited the black and white version in a way that put all the emphasis on the coffee maker and it worked beautifully. The color works differently, the whole picture should be emphasized. Now I'm liking them both :-)

Thanks again for looking.

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Hard to say as I like them both. I feel the colour add to the overall feel and give a certain 'depth' to the image. In the B&W i find the light bulb less disturbing (my eye wanders to it in the colour version) and  the Gent in the foreground seems more separated from the background

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B&W. As someone said, both are really good pictures, but B&W has something that colour cannot renders at all. Maybe the "poetry". And B&W is out of time while colour... you can tell how old is a colour photo, what age was represented, more or less.

OT: how goes it in Beirut? I watched the news and it seems you have a mess over there.

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