Not sure what you are looking at ?I think that you have overcorrected the perspective a little bit. That gives the impression that the buildings are falling toward us. Is that what you wanted?
The vertical lines are straight . The slight sensation of tilt is more a consequence of visual psychology than an actual perspective problem.Vertical lines on the left building and on the right-hand side of the tower should be parallel to the sides of the frame. When one takes a picture with the camera looking up, they will go to the inside of the frame when looking up, as the sides of the letter A. Here they have been corrected, perhaps automatically, to go to the outside when following them up, as the sides of the letter V.
The left-hand building isn't a simple rectangular box. It has:Vertical lines on the left building and on the right-hand side of the tower should be parallel to the sides of the frame. When one takes a picture with the camera looking up, they will go to the inside of the frame when looking up, as the sides of the letter A. Here they have been corrected, perhaps automatically, to go to the outside when following them up, as the sides of the letter V.
The vertical lines are straight . The slight sensation of tilt is more a consequence of visual psychology than an actual perspective problem.
The title "The Shape of Change" refers to the older commercial buildings in the foreground and the newer residential tower behind them. To me, the image shows how different eras of development shape the same street over time.Trying to understand the context ...
was this image shot with the camera at eye-level and focused at the same level across the street, thereby making all verticals vertical?
Or, was it shot conventionally, focused somewhere up the building(s) and "corrected" in post?
I assume no tilt/shifting involved.
... sorry James, I didn't get the title.
rgds,
Ted
I think what you're seeing may be the natural two-point perspective of the streetscape. The building is being viewed from a corner rather than straight on, so the geometry naturally opens outward toward the viewer. It's a perspective commonly seen in traditional cityscape paintings and architectural drawings.Possibly. However, using rectangles as Doug showed, I still find that the vertical structures on the building are disposed as the sides of the letter "V".
I think another factor is that we're looking at two very different architectural styles separated by many years of development.There is in fact a very slight convergence upward on the image of what are certainly vertical lines on the building to the right.
But I suspect that the "sense" we may have that the vertical lines on the buildings significantly converge on the image is in fact an illusion, probably caused by the fact that we are used to seeing such lines coverage in our human sight, and we subconsciously "expect" that.
The older street-front buildings are largely rectilinear, with strong horizontal and vertical elements, while the newer tower incorporates curved balconies, setbacks, and projecting forms.
Understood - thanks!The title "The Shape of Change" refers to the older commercial buildings in the foreground and the newer residential tower behind them. To me, the image shows how different eras of development shape the same street over time.
Regards,
James
The lens was at level .Understood - thanks!
Was the lens level or tilted up and fixed in post?