Love this.<p>However, the photograph at the top looks like it has been severely mangled by post-processing. Maybe it's been damaged by a bad HDR pipeline. There's a complete lack of large-scale contrast, and all of the objects have weird "halos" around them. Honestly, it makes me feel a little bit uneasy, even ill, looking at it. No exaggeration.<p>This can sometimes happen if you drag your sliders too far in an HDR tone-mapping application, or if you are heavy-handed with unsharp mask. I don't want to try and say that this is aesthetically "wrong", but I think that the reason why amateur photographers make this mistake is because they look at the post-processed photo too long, and your eyes start to adapt to it. It helps to look at real-world scenery occasionally, or known good photos, to remind yourself what the real world (or good photos) looks like, while you are editing photos. Not because realism is better, but to avoid unintentionally extreme editing choices like this.<p>Mixing engineers have the same problem. If you listen to the same song too much, you start to perceive it as normal, and you have to spend breaks listening to other things.