===== From xenoarch@mindspring.com: Good images, the canyon cliffs could be a little less flat. ===== From bobfranke@halcyon.com: Great image. This is what Bryce does best. The canyon is really good. It seems to repeat itself in the distance, but I am not sure, so who cares? The planet and the other moons are well done. Although the people are of very simple construction, the look just fine. I do think one or two of them should be pointing at the space ship. ===== From gregj56590@aol.com: Breathtaking, nice use of scale. Theme isn't that exciting. ===== From grimmg@hotmail.com: Classic but very beautiful ! ===== From Sean_Hamilton@amrcorp.com: Great canyon and ship! ===== From dick@buckosoft.com: I like the cliffs. ===== From gmccarter@hotmail.com: An evocative, well made image, but the viewpoint could be better. Try moving the camera downwards which will eliminate the unfortunate "flat line" appearance of the horizon. (But not too far downwards -- you want to keep the emphasis on the tiny human figures). ===== From djconnel@flash.net: Wow! That's one of the best Bryce images I've seen..... Bryce's weakness is in its textures, but your wonderful golden tint has overcome that limitation. ===== From east103@dialaccess.com: This is one of the prettier SciFi pictures in the competition. I think a little texture, (bumps or ripples), on the river would help ===== From ethelm@bigfoot.com: This image has a nice atmosphere about it. It would be nit-picking to question a space ship taking off or landing, with solar panels extended. Good colour and composition. ===== From blaineholmes@hotmail.com: Absolutly love the canyon. The gas giant is nice also. ===== From wozzeck@club-internet.fr: Nice alien sky. ===== From r@ptp627.localaccess.com: very impresive, if I had entered last round I would have voted for yours. Notable for originality, composition, lighting, textures, modelling ===== From r@haka.saunalahti.fi: The ship and the canyon look good, though I'm having a hard time believing that anything shaped like that could land in an atmosphere, much less take off again. But why is the rest of the terrain flat?