15 favorites     30 comments    1 385 visits

Location

Lat, Lng:  
You can copy the above to your favourite mapping app.
Address:  unknown

 View on map

See also...

Everyone's Photo Pool Everyone's Photo Pool


Holy Macro! Holy Macro!


Ipernity Addicts Ipernity Addicts


New Flickr Survivors New Flickr Survivors


Closer to the Motive Closer to the Motive


Tabletop Tabletop


Time For Experiments Time For Experiments


See more...

Keywords

cptcustom
Sunday
The
Paul
Photography
solo
cyborg
fiction
fantasia
North
Yorkshire
PD
autofantasia
Northallerton
The Sunday Challenge
TSC
Challenge
Davidson
North Yorkshire
forced
monster
weapon
optical
toy
photographer
photos
space
robot
photo
illusion
of
auto
miniature
alien
ray
gun
science-fiction
perspective
laser
model
science
close-up
macro


Authorizations, license

Visible by: Everyone
All rights reserved

1 385 visits


Surrender Earthlings

Surrender Earthlings
This week, the Sunday Challenge was forced perspective a technique that attempts to manipulate our sense of perception to make us believe something is smaller and/or larger than it actually is.

The old horror films used to use forced perspective and more recently Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings trilogy took the technique to new levels.

Now, as I had no desire to appear in my photograph and no willing volunteers were forthcoming I had to go down the model route.

This toy robot, purchased from Boyes in Northallerton specifically for the challenge, is only about 8 inches tall, but I've tried to create the illusion that he is much, much larger.

I set up a small table in my back garden and positioned it about 10 feet away from one of our boundary fences. Then I covered it in fine gravel and added a few small stones before positioning my little intergalactic friend on a piece of wood hidden behind the larger of the stones.

I secured my camera on a tripod and zoomed out to get the smallest focal length possible on my stock lens, as this apparently helps you achieve maximum depth of field. I also tried to ensure I squeezed every inch of DOF possible by using Apperture Priority and selecting f22.

Then I moved the camera and tripod as close as I could get to the table whilst still being able to focus making sure that I was looking up at the model to make him look as big as I could.

I opted to use this shot as I'd positioned everything so as to get the gable end of our neighbour's house into the frame, which I thought that would aid the illusion.

This was the first time I've tried working with forced perspective so I'm fairly pleased with the results and am fairly confident I'll try experimenting with it more in the future.

, , Indycaver (Norm), Jan and 11 other people have particularly liked this photo


Latest comments - All (30)
 autofantasia
autofantasia club has replied
Thank you! :)
10 years ago.
 Esther
Esther club
A fellow robot aficionado. . . at least for forced perspective photographs. Congratulations on Explore.
10 years ago.
 autofantasia
autofantasia club has replied
Thanks Esther! :)
10 years ago.
 
%name%
Oh do beware ... clever and well done. Congratulations on Explore.
10 years ago.
 autofantasia
autofantasia club has replied
Thanks Chris for the kind comment and the fave. Glad you like it! :)
10 years ago.

Sign-in to write a comment.