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From sshaw@fas.harvard.edu:
Good take on the theme, and an original way to show the juxtaposition.  I was confused about it until I read the file, however.  I missed what you were trying to do.  The detail that really impressed me was that you thought to make the stone at the base of the door worn down on the "modern side".

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From sammy@cube.net:
very good concept

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From Martin.Magnusson.7121@student.uu.se:
Excellent interpretation of the topic!
The door looks good, and I like the wall texture.
The road still looks a bit too regular, all the stones seem to have the same 
height. Also, the grafitti looks like it was printed on the wall. You could have
tried hand-drawing it and applying it with an image map.
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From jerry@hoboes.com:
Interesting idea! That was a very neat graffitti artist in the past, however. The aging on the door looks a lot like freezer moss! Very nice cobblestone, and nice detail on the door and doorstep!
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From jull43@ij.net:
I see a house wall of a single piece of stone. I see a 
shadow possibly sitting on a "legdge" that by perspective 
is clearly not wide enough. And know of no construction 
style that would have a sitting ledge or a single piece of 
stone outside of a city in Lebenon and a couple SE Asian 
temples. 


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From bsieker@techfak.uni-bielefeld.de:
I like the old door, and also the ghost shadow is a nice idea, but the camera
angle is a bit too unspectacular.

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From jaime@ctav.es:
Nice collaboration! The idea of the history on objects is also interesting (as
a solution to avoid to trace people :).

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From gmccarter@hotmail.com:
Clever concept, well executed.  Good weathering on the door.  Interesting contrasts/comparisons.  I like the cobblestones, and the worn doorstep.

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From davidwilkinson@cwcom.net:
An interesting concept, but the image didn't really convince me of it.

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From ethelm@bigfoot.com:
A very nice image, well done. Good concept.

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From 101741.541@compuserve.com:
The door and it's framing are very good, I love the used 
stone under the door !
However, the rest of the image is not as good, the 
contrast between the 2 eras
is not always pushed where it could be : ground, wall 
stones,...  And the windows
(ancient and new) are both irrealistic (but that's my habit 
to be picky about
windows ;)

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From bobfranke@halcyon.com:
Interesting concept.  I like the texture on the wall and 
the stone street came out well

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From peter@table76.demon.co.uk:
"Then and now" - a nice interpretation of history.

