What is a clinic?
The clinics the Saskatoon Camera Club hold (six times a year) give the members a chance to select a couple slides/prints to be evaluated by a panel of three judges, rated, and given constructive comments. That is why the word "clinic" is used. The clinic provides a forum to have work evaluated and have constructive comments made.
Who are the judges?
Two club members and one external photographer.
Why select topics?
You need a common topic to aim at. So topics are selected to give you a goal to achieve in your photograph. Of the 6 clinics each year two major themes are there - General and Nature.
Timeline of Clinics
- Entries are submitted on the dates designated in the Club Calendar.
A closed judging session takes place following this
- Judging is done by two
club members and a professional.
- Results and constructive commentary are given by the professional judge on
the first Tuesday of the next month.
How is your Photograph Judged?
The photographs are judges on three levels:
Technical
Here you measure the skill the photographer has shown handling equipment. Depth of Field; Focus; Shutter Speed; Lighting; panning. For prints the following are included: Mounting, Spotting, Appropriate Paper (for contrast and tonal range)
A score of 10 points.
Interpretation
Here you evaluate how well the photographer has interpreted the topic photographically. Consider "Is the subject matter appropriate?" Has it been chosen carefully? Has it been captured in an interesting and/or original way? Visual Communication is important. Does the subject communicate itself clearly without distractions? NOTE: Since each entry must be titled - does the title assist in this process?
A score of 10 points
Pictorial (Artistic) Merit
This is a measure of the success of the composition. Factors include the "Rules of Composition", Lead-in Lines, Rule of Thirds, Balance, Quality of Lighting, Framing, Tonal Range and Texture, Pattern and Rhythm. Or, was a Rule of Composition broken to aid in the success of the photo. This is often called the "Wow Factor". How do these elements come together to create impact.
A score of 10 points.
Add them up and you get a score out of 30.
What does the scoring reflect?
30/30 Unique; outstanding; stunning; flawless (rarely awarded)
27/20 Outstanding; dramatic; beautiful; technically superb; very strong impact
24/30 Excellent' worthy of Honorable Mention - minor flaws only. Demonstrates photography mastery; a memorable picture.
21/30 Very good, but falls short of excellent rating.
18/30 Good. Competent: technically satisfactory, but lacking in impact, interest, strength of composition, etc.
15/30 Average, undistinguished; unmemorable. Shows minor faults. Lots of room for improvement in composition, interpretation, etc.
12/30 Below standard; lacking in some essential quality or definable way. One or more specific faults which really spoon the picture
2009-10 Clinics
1. Song Title Sept 22nd
2. Ant’s View * Oct 20th
3. On 8th Street Nov 17th
4. Shadows * Dec 8th
5. Candle Lit Jan 19th
6. Celebrate the Seasons * Feb 16th
* Nature Photography: There must be no evidence of human activity (roads, fences, buildings, power lines, jet streams, stumps, domestic animals, cultivated plants etc.)
Treasure Hunt Topics
Q (the letter)
Quonset (object)
Quick (the adjective)
Quilt (object)
Queen (the noun)
All images in this website © Saskatoon Camera Club and its members. All Rights Reserved.
New comment: Requires approval