===== From uwezi@geocities.com: I could say everything is great: the choice of the view, the realism, the water... The atmosphere seems a little bit too dark, though ===== From tglover@nettally.com: Impressive amount of research -- nice looking models and good composition. Sky is ok -- water looks fine --and slow ships leave rolling wakes that are just like waves -- no foam. Your ship adds nicely to the scale w/o being obtrusive. On the other hand, the barrel is distracting. ===== From Alain.Culos@bigfoot.com: Good. I especially like the way the title and author are integrated into the image. ===== From gmccarter@hotmail.com: Good work on the environment surrounding the bridge, which completes the scene. Many of the colors in the scene seem too intense, saturated. ===== From mark.wagner17@gte.net: I like where you put your signature! ===== From martialrameaux@multimania.com: Very interesting image description; good work for the fog and light, but need some presence as to touch with finger ! ;-) Martial ===== From clem@dhol.com: Good job, but the image is a bit sterile. I would have preferred a more dramatic view, say a closeup showing the complexity of the structure and giving a feeling of the forces being balanced at the cost of showing the whole bridge. As it is, the bridge is background and the focus of the image seems to be the water. The paint can is a good idea, but the positioning of the can also draws focus away from the bridge. Nonetheless, I like this image and I appreciate the research that went in to it. ===== From mar@physics.usyd.edu.au: Very impressive... looks a little more real than the other Forth Bridge. The background shoreline and ship are small elements but they add a lot to the overall feel of the image. Only fault I can see is the ripples on the water seem a bit too regular. ===== From file: I grew up right next to the Forth Bridge and this is spot on! Fantastically accurate modelling of what is a complex structure. Notable for modelling ===== From file: Incredible modeling. Some irregularity in the waves will help keep the viewer from wondering "what's off to the left, making those waves?" Notable for modelling, composition