View allAll Photos Tagged Perspective

Roof of Art and Exhibition Hall... architecture by Gustav Peichl.

Love the linear perspective ...heading towards a common point... No matter where they come from, all journeys will end at a common finishing point

I should have done this properly (at least straighten the sheet!) if I'd thought it would actually work... From the stud=R2D2 scale of 30051 to the sheer size of the Venator class model and the "midi-scale" Star Destroyer.

La gare de Lyon Part-Dieu, de nuit. Huitième photo du Projet52.

From the perspective of most - balloons are great fun. Flora hasn't been around any mylar balloons before - so when this one started to loose steam and float around the dining/piano room, she was VERY frightened. It was really funny. She's in her classic "I'm scared of this thing, but I'm trying to look very brave" pose - note the wagging tail and silly crouch.

The new suburban trains here consist of several flexibly joined cars, and you can walk through half the train. That of course gives a fantastic perspective when you look along the aisle. Today I had the luck of standing at one end and not too many passengers, so I couldn't resist taking a snapshot.

 

Die neuen S-Bahnen im RMV bestehen aus Waggons, die mit flexiblen Bälgen verbunden sind, so dass man innen durch den halben Zug laufen kann und die Nahtstellen fast nicht bemerkt. Die Symmetie und der Fluchtpunkteffekt reizen mich daran schon seit einiger Zeit, und heute habe ich endlich einen brauchbaren Schnappschuss machen können.

A set of #photography by @pNut1982AD of my last impression of "Dunkery".

fun to do these sometimes...

Images from GENBAND's 2013 Perspectives Conference in Orlando, Florida.

Images from GENBAND's 2013 Perspectives Conference in Orlando, Florida.

Paris La Défense - décembre 2007

 

Test sigma 10-20mm HSM

Farthest to posts moderate telephoto angle, shows change in perspective due to moving closer to subject.

Taking into consideration perspective, i've used this angle of frame to create an interesting effect on the image

Look at that water! And look at what these students and townspeople were able to accomplish. The water you see is standing in the parking lot.

 

Pemberville, OH

Model: Erica

Location: Labuan

This is from an assignment on Dyxum.com. Dyxum is a website dedicated the Minolta and Sony A-Mount cameras and lenses. One of the nice things about the site is that they have some truly knowledgeable and dedicated photographers there who are willing to take the time to craft assignments for other photographers to shoot to better their trade.

This assignment was entitled 'Perspective.'

It's a three part assignment and in the first part, you were supposed to take a telephoto shot, and then a wide angle shot, and crop the wide angle shot in Post to be the same framing and size as the original.

The second part is to take a wide angle lens, a telephoto lens, and a 'normal' lens. Shoot your subject with the Wide and the Tele lenses, and then put the normal lens on the camera. Move forward and back on foot until the size and framing of the original is duplicated in the 'normal' lens. I shot that part with a Tamron 28-75mm, so I used 28mm and 75mm as my wide and tele, and then 55mm as my 'normal' and moved front and back. I should have moved further back for the wide part.

Finally, Part C is walk around until you find something you want to shoot, and STOP and SHOOT IT. Then, look at the photo, and see how it can be improved by moving the camera up or down, and left to right. I moved five feel left, and reframed and shot You can see the difference a mere 5' makes.

This is from an assignment on Dyxum.com. Dyxum is a website dedicated the Minolta and Sony A-Mount cameras and lenses. One of the nice things about the site is that they have some truly knowledgeable and dedicated photographers there who are willing to take the time to craft assignments for other photographers to shoot to better their trade.

This assignment was entitled 'Perspective.'

It's a three part assignment and in the first part, you were supposed to take a telephoto shot, and then a wide angle shot, and crop the wide angle shot in Post to be the same framing and size as the original.

The second part is to take a wide angle lens, a telephoto lens, and a 'normal' lens. Shoot your subject with the Wide and the Tele lenses, and then put the normal lens on the camera. Move forward and back on foot until the size and framing of the original is duplicated in the 'normal' lens. I shot that part with a Tamron 28-75mm, so I used 28mm and 75mm as my wide and tele, and then 55mm as my 'normal' and moved front and back. I should have moved further back for the wide part.

Finally, Part C is walk around until you find something you want to shoot, and STOP and SHOOT IT. Then, look at the photo, and see how it can be improved by moving the camera up or down, and left to right. I moved five feel left, and reframed and shot You can see the difference a mere 5' makes.

Jeffree Stewart drawing in charcoal

Always good to get down low for lions. See www.wildcast.net

As in "get some perspective, Andy".

 

I thought I had a pretty lousy morning at work today. Eventually I was able to get out for a shorter than usual photowalk, and realized that when it comes to my job, I really have very little to complain about...

sorry about the power lines, but I couldn't resist, as the truck is dwarfed by the windmills

 

until I opened this shot up, I really didn't have much of an idea how little these guys are. I would have guessed they were well over twice this size.

 

weird.

 

Week 5 - extreme perspective photography task.

 

Middlesex University: Product Design and Engineering first year undergraduates...

Draw the line (28/365)

Please View On Black

 

Have got this shot already in the stream but I thought i would throw this one in aswell just for a bit of perspective

This high point was the day DeGobbi posted his Crawler Town: my photostream hits jumped to 4882 and 3998 later that weekend. He''s currently got 157,000 views on one photo alone, and a bit has trickled over to my stream after he said he was inspired by my creations. You'll see a 1818 later on, which is when I posted my eight-legged walker. Kinda puts things in perspective.

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