They can't both be right
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Dragon Rider (drag)replied to [email protected] last edited by
The right one looks like a mii
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Dragon Rider (drag)replied to [email protected] last edited by
It is flipped. The mirror is showing you the reverse side of the card, so the image in the mirror is flipped twice. Two flips make a normal. A person looking at that card from the mirror side would see it as reversed, but the mirror flips it again so it looks normal to you.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Imo mirror selfies do on average tend to look a lot better. I think a lot of it must be that the photo is taken from further away. This causes two things...
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The picture isn't a detailed because the shot is simply further away. Wrinkles, acne, and other imperfections are not as clear or pronounced.
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Features like your nose, chin, eyes, etc. appear smaller in far shots than close shots. In close shots, there is a bit of a "fisheye" effect due to the perspective, even if you aren't using a fisheye lens. It exaggerates a lot of facial features and isn't how you normally see yourself when you're looking into the mirror because you just aren't that close.
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π° π π± π¦ π³ π¦ π° βΉοΈreplied to [email protected] last edited by
Provider locked. Can't install Graphene.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Um.. that's what I said was my assumption. But according to the comment I was replying to, people prefer the flipped version because it looks like what they see in the mirror, i.e. what they think they look like.
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[email protected]replied to Dragon Rider (drag) last edited by
The mirror is showing you the reverse side of the card
Yup! See the guy's finger is on the reverse side of the card? It's touching the N on the right side of your view. If you looked at it from where the mirror is, you'd see the guy's finger touching the N, but now it's on the left side of your view. Because you flipped, not the writing.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
The lens doesnβt matter.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
To help stem the downvotes from people who don't understand, if you take a picture of a vase with various mm lenses and then crop to the size of the vase, every picture will be the same. It's only distance that matters. Taking 20 pictures in a grid really close to your face with a telephoto lense and stitching them together into a single picture will result in a wide angle shot.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
True but the point of using a different lens is that you move closer / father away from the objective. You get the best head shots from a distance with a telephoto lens. Not really practical for selfies of course.
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My eye is.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
You get the same shot from that distance with a wide angle lens. All a telephoto lens does is optically crop the picture.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Okay, that's simply untrue. Look into dolly zoom to see the difference in action
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
A dolly zoom moves the camera, thatβs the entire point of a dolly zoom. The zoom while moving the camera is only there to keep the framing the same, the actual visual change is caused by the movement of the camera, not by the changing of the focal length. Youβd get the exact same effect if you used a fixed-focus lens and just cropped the resulting video to keep the framing constant.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
It's actually true though. Only difference is you need to crop the image on a wider lens, making the quality lower.
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[email protected]replied to The Picard Maneuver last edited by
Please tell me it's the camera. Or lie to me.
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Okay, now I get what you're saying and you're absolutely correct. But from the perspective of the photographer, it doesn't really matter. The motif you're aiming for is fixed. What you then influence is distance and lens and lens I can directly read from my camera. If I shoot with a wide angle, I have to get closer to get the motif that I want, if I zoom in, I need to step back. So, yes, technically distance is what matters but the distance correlates with the lens I'm using. That's why tips like "shoot portraits with 85 mm to get the most natural look" still make sense although you're right
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[email protected]replied to [email protected] last edited by
Which counters their original statement that the lens doesn't matter. I can't crop without losing quality and uncropping only works in shitty movies
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[email protected]replied to The Picard Maneuver last edited by
Well let me tell u both are lying ( it depends on the view of people)
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[email protected]replied to The Picard Maneuver last edited by
Focal length makes a real difference. Cell phone cameras have a really hard time with that; that's why photos from a selfie stick look better than just holding the camera, even at arms length.