But on a more constructive note, I should say that I'm attracted to collodion-ish images (technical term which I hope covers a swathe of variants...all of which I like)....I just love the reduced contrast you get, the process back story and the "reach out and touch me" quality of the images. If I'm honest, a lot of it's to do also with the edges....but I'll probably burn in 'style over substance' hell for saying that.
Portraits vs Landscapes? When a photo's good, it's good and when it's not....it's not. Some of the portraits that the guy Ken has linked to aren't particularly strong, so its great to see those wider aspect landscapes further down the page when you scroll to them because they're stronger and have more impact, but a couple of 4 of the portraits are great too.
I think I tend to draw the line at re-enactment type collodion-ish portraits (that word again), and prefer seeing the here-and-now as opposed to a contrived version of a past that might have been, but other than that I'm all good with portraits....and landscapes.
Carl: Thanks for the link; I always follow your recommendations with interest. I have mixed reactions to Deborah Parkin's work which revolve around subject matter. I think she's great at what she does and occasionally there's a photo that literally blows me away, but on the whole, the vibe I take away is not one I'm comfortable with. Loved some of the collodion flowers though. Whoah!