- How did you come up with this idea?
- I came up with this idea by looking at example of surreal images. I noticed that a lot of them were some sort of background that was placed in or on something. Then, I chose a background (the ocean) and thought of a place or thing that held a liquid (a wine glass).
- What were the challenges you faced?
- The challenges i faced was making sure that the image was erased it it was erased really closely and good enough that it looked sort of real.
- What did you learn and what would you do differently?
- I learned what a surreal image was and how to create one. If I did this agin I would erase closer.
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Forced perspective is a photographic optical illusion used to make objects seem different than their actual size.
Forced perspective is possible by the single lens of the camera. Unlike your eyes, which work in together to create depth perception, the camera only has one eye and no depth perception - it sees things as flat. Photographs where one subject seems to merge with another and photographs which defy gravity are technically part of this genre of photography as well although they actually rely more on orientation and point of view than a true visual compression due lack of depth perception. A psychological phenomenon, when a person perceives a random stimulus as something significant. For example, when one sees faces on or in random objects.
To create this grafitti effect in photoshop I took a flower picture, then rasturized the image and then did the threshold effect to make it all black. The
To create this kaleidoscope effect I used my butterfly effect image and copy and pasted it onto itself. Then, I made the image smaller and rotated it on top of the original. I repeated this step a second time.
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Kelly
"Sometimes the right path is not the easiest one" CategoriesArchives
June 2015
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