I have seen some photographs made on 4x5"(i think....) where the people and buildings look like toy people and toy buildings.
Is this an "effect" achiveable with 4x5"?
And maybe with a telephoto lens, Nikon 360mm?
- Martin Hellen Schei
I have seen some photographs made on 4x5"(i think....) where the people and buildings look like toy people and toy buildings.
Is this an "effect" achiveable with 4x5"?
And maybe with a telephoto lens, Nikon 360mm?
- Martin Hellen Schei
It's all a matter of perspective and camera position, I'd think. The effect is probably easier to achieve with a wider lens than with a long one.
plus, sometimes they are toys. There are a some photogorpahers/artists who make quite exquisite models of everyday scenes and then photograph them in large format.... or like Thomas Demand, make them out of paper and cardboard
You'd be amazed how small the demand is for pictures of trees... - Fred Astaire to Audrey Hepburn
www.photo-muse.blogspot.com blog
yeah, all of a sudden it seems like three or four different people are doing this. i forget their names but have seen work at a expos. a couple of them looked like stephen shore scenes, but they were dioramas.Originally Posted by tim atherton
and there's that guy that makes lunar landscapes in a fishtank and photographs them in 4x5 - and keeps flooding out his downstairs neighbours...
there was also one I came across online that I dearly wish I could find again. I was researching Calvino's wonderful book Invisible Cities and someone had built these little cities based on the books descriptions and placed them on windowsills in offices or in crevices in broken down walls or under steps and stairways or in stairwells and then photographed them tucked away - these little "invisible" cities
Last edited by tim atherton; 4-Jun-2006 at 09:59.
You'd be amazed how small the demand is for pictures of trees... - Fred Astaire to Audrey Hepburn
www.photo-muse.blogspot.com blog
There's Walter Wick, the guy that made I Spy and Can You See What I See books.
I find his stage-building fascinating, for sheer patience if nothing else.
You get this effect by tilting the front standard upwards.
I have seen the effect that Amund shared here done on an even more extreme level. I cannot remember the photographers name, but there were some images taken from a high camera angle, and using selective focus. What was intriguing about those images was that they included people in the scenes, but you could not tell they were real people until you looked at the image for a while. I would suspect near wide open aperture, and tilting were involved, perhaps even a swing on some of the images.
A high camera angle looking down upon a subject can make it seem like someone's model railroad diorama, or something like that. When we look at miniature models of cities, we tend to be taller, and also tend to focus only upon a small detail area at a time. This is selective focus of our eyes, and the trick is to emulate that in the camera. Definitely a fun project, but it might be tough to pull it off convincingly.
Ciao!
Gordon
Check this site out: http://www.davidburnett.com/
Hello Amund,
I think I found some of that on the David Burnett site under 2004 Politics, particularly the first image. Indicates a Speed Graphic was used. This is what I had in mind with the people images, though I wish I could remember that other photographer.
Ciao!
Gordon Moat
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