Dentist, and general teeth lover.
Great owl shot!
Decided to try and get out with the cam more this year, so bright and reasonably early today I went for an amble:
Some interesting light with he sun coming in and out of the clouds, then it just went flat overcast and started hailing.
Unfortunately, I only had a 50mm prime and couldn't move back a few more metres...
.
Full res version here - it's big!
Dareos (25-01-2013)
Needs straightening something rotten, I'm getting neck ache looking at that.
It is straight :s although I suppose the waterline could give the impression it's crooked. I suppose it could go 0.5 degrees anticlockwise to balance out the straightness or the tower with the building on the right (latter is vertical). In fact, camera is pointing ever so slightly up which is why the verticals aren't parallel. I I had a PC lens or could have moved back a few more metres....
if that's straight then you need a lcp to sort it out
Capitalization is the difference between helping your Uncle Jack
off a horse and helping your uncle jack off a horse.
lcp ?
Out of interest, if it isn't straight, what is for you? I'm genuinely curious as I've taken the photo as the reality was, but it may look different to others.
Lens Calibration Profile.
However, I think its just Gonzo doesn't get what a parizians idea of straight is
throw new ArgumentException (String, String, Exception)
i take it back, it looked out but the building on the rights bang on
Capitalization is the difference between helping your Uncle Jack
off a horse and helping your uncle jack off a horse.
Looks like it is aligned correctly but has a little barrel distortion going on.
Just perspective I think. Without a tilt and shift lens buildings naturally lean inwards, if you align for it thinking it's just rotation (as here, aligned on right hand buildings) then the rest can look a little odd - see how the Eiffel tower and it's reflection are not aligned vertically. I would undo the rotation a little (camera go clockwise a smidge/image anti-clockwise) and either leave the perspective distortion in or use a perspective correction tool.
Lovely image though.
it tends to be a bad idea for tall buildings to be rectangular anyway, they are normally topiziod, and the ones that aren't, from a frameworks point of view are!
However when up that close, I wouldn't of thought a tiltshift was needed? As the amount is so minor one could easily do it all in post pro, without much loss of detail?
throw new ArgumentException (String, String, Exception)
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)