Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/05/03
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]At 09:57 AM 03-05-98 +0200, Alf wrote: >Dan, I have some problems with your description/ definition of >the "wideangle look". > >If a picture is small - do you call it "wideangle look (of the >observer)", when he/she sees i.e. parts of the wall, or because >the in-objects are in size below "naturalness" ? > >If a picture is large, and the observer cannot move far enough >to see the total picture (no matter of the object size) - do you >call this "wideangle look" also ? I guess I should have been more careful about using that term. Wide-angle look means different things to different people. If I photograph a building by standing in front of it and pointing up with my 20mm lens mounted 35mm camera, the building will show severe keystoning, which most people will say gives it a 'wide-angle look'. If I mounted a 500mm lens on the camera, and aimed towards the same point, all I would see on the 35mm negative would be a few bricks or windows in the middle of the building, the 'wide-angle' look would be gone. But, if the 500mm lens could produce a large enough image circle, and I used it to expose a large enough piece of film, the keystoning would still be there, just like the 20mm lens. My meaning of wide-angle is just how the image the you look at compares to the original scene. If I look at you from a distance of 10 feet, I perceive you to be, say, 5" tall. If the photograph I took of you also shows you to be 5" tall when viewed at a given distance, I define the perspective of the photograph to be *normal*. If you are smaller on the photograph than in real life, then the perspective is *wide-angle*. Of course, and this is just to minimize the flames ;), the wide-angle look would be enhanced if the smaller photo of you also included a wide expanse of the surrounding room, so that even though the image of you looks un-naturally small, the photograph itself is of a larger than normal size (I'm not sure if that is precise, but I think you know what I mean). But the perspective itself won't be changed just because I include more of the surroundings in the photograph, and print on larger paper. Dan C.