@cuthbert,
We were all new at this at one time. I started in 1951, and I'm still learning.
Keep learning and taking photos. If you don't take photos you will never have a favorite photo. The more we use our cameras and the more we learn, the better are our chances to have "favorite photos". I would love to see some of your best, as would most photographers here. We learn from others, and remember that there are no hard rules in this. Some of the most abstract photos can be really interesting and unusual. Use the basic "Rules" that you hear as guide lines, and break them with new ideas when it seems right. Some of these crazy and off-the-wall type shots can prove very interesting. Digital Photographs are FREE, until you print them. Film photography on a tight budget cost too much for the film and then waiting for processing, so hard to learn from mistakes. We don't have this problem now. Go have fun and try things for new and unusual shots, and always work to improve for the next shot. Print the good ones and post them for us to see.
@skullfunkerry,
That's a great start for "Still Life" shooting, and I love Calvin and Hobbes cartoons too. I like it !!
Just a suggestion, something for you to try -
A higher F-Stop setting would get more of the cartoon in focus and make the shot a bit more interesting. Expect to need more light for the same photo brightness, but don't overdue either. The end result should be about the same brightness and I think it will look a bit better if you can get a little more in-focus over a larger area, but at the same brightness. A little more of the cartoon in-focus would add more interest, but don't try to get rid of all of the out of focus areas, as it adds a bit of mystery and interest to the shot. Just my opinion, and something to try. It's a suggestion that might be a slight improvement, and you may like it better, or not. I would just prefer a little more of the cartoon to be in sharp focus. We learn from our friends and our own experience. I'm trying to help, and I hope I'm a friend here.
With the back leaning cartoon page, I would use my 22 mm shift-tilt lens for this to help increase the depth of the in-focus area in the center of the page, but most don't have access to one of these. Do you?
Charley