The top 12 thing was fun. I often judge photography for different events from kids to serious adults. To keep it fair and hopefully unbiased I've establised a set rules that tells people what is good or not so good about their work. I set the same guidelines for myself. Not only do the people entered learn but so do I. This is why it's good for all of us to see our work compared with others and to learn from each other. Here's my criteria.
1. Technical. Is it sharp where needed, properly exposed, cropped, blacks black and whites white, clean (literally) and so on.
2. Composition. Big subject! Examples woud be rule of thirds. Lines, colors, contrast or anything that brings your eye to the subject. In the case of moving things, more room in front than back. Things in the right place.
3. Visual Impact. Does it stand out among others. When you go in a room with 10 pictures on the wall, which do you look at first? Some factors could be raw color or contrast, simplicity, even size. All important in advertising.
4. Time. Photography is about moments captured. Sunsets and bridges will be there everyday to shoot. The crash of the Hindenburg will not. Being there at the right time and conditions and the rareity of the moment is what photography is all about.
5. Wow! factor. Did I say wow when I looked at your work? Yes I did. 1-5 points for that.
That's how you were judged at least by me (for what that's worth, LOL!!). I hope these guidelines help you in photography. Rarely do we get all the points in all the subjects but it's a good way to analyze our photography.
How's that?
Max