"Blurry" photos due to the weather

Hello, I've keep getting nominations with their photos like this:
This photo was taken during cloudy weather, aid it's quite blurry. And I've got several nominations like this several times: taken during cloudy weather and either blurry or object view is darkened, shadowy or any term it describe the most. (I'm not a photograph expert anyway, so I don't know if there's any correlation between the weather and quality of the photo taken during that weather.)
Should blurry photos 'caused' by the weather acceptable?
Thank you.
Best Answers
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TheFarix-PGO Posts: 4,976 ✭✭✭✭✭
You should only reject photos as low-quality if they are too dark or blurry that you cannot recognize the object or if the photo appears to be take from inside a vehicle.
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NianticCasey-ING Posts: 538 admin
As a few folks on this thread have already commented, a photo should only be rejected if the quality was so poor that you're unable to clearly see the Wayspot itself. While the weather may play a contributing factor to this, in this instance, this photo looks clear enough to not be rejected as low-quality.
Answers
That doesn't look too bad to me. You can see the building clear enough. That would be passable to me.
The only time I would reject for something being too blurry is if I can barely **** what's being nominated. It's ok to approve a less than perfect photo as long as it doesnt fall under any of the rejection reasons (such as being taken from a car or being third party) and we can see what's being submitted.
I didn't know that Wayfarer was a photographic competition.
That's a perfectly fine photo, there's no doubt at all about the main focus of the photo, the building is perfectly clear and punishing the nomination due to the weather would be just horrible.
You should only reject photos as low-quality if they are too dark or blurry that you cannot recognize the object or if the photo appears to be take from inside a vehicle.
As a few folks on this thread have already commented, a photo should only be rejected if the quality was so poor that you're unable to clearly see the Wayspot itself. While the weather may play a contributing factor to this, in this instance, this photo looks clear enough to not be rejected as low-quality.
Thanks Casey.