baanna.blogg.se

Horizon line picture
Horizon line picture





horizon line picture

Camera tilted back slightly, need to crop knees to get away with it.Feels like you're looking up at him but down at the ground. You'd have to add perspective to the model This one just looks wrong no matter where you try to put him, or at what distance. On a slope, camera too high & aimed down… tough to get this one to work, as the angles don't match.Feels like a longer lens on the landscape. I've made no attempt to properly blend to landscapes or match lighting etc. These were done very rapidly, some came out better than others. You also tend to have to put him slap bang in the centre so the left/right perspective matches.Īs you can see, merely knowing where the horizon should be is only half the battle. From 2m or less you will see a greater difference in apparent sizes at extremities than if it was taken from 4m or more. The distance the model was shot from & therefore the lens length will also have an effect. You need to push or pull the model close or far depending on how long a lens your landscape was shot too. Wrong height, or tilted too far up or down will quickly fail to look comfortable. You can see that getting the horizon around the model's waist tends towards it fitting the image but only if you can place his feet in an appropriate position for his scale and only if the camera height & tilt approximately matches. You can get a rough idea by dropping the model into some landscapes & seeing how it sits. So the 'simple' answer is it's between his waist & elbows, give or take.

#Horizon line picture full

Full body shots like this tend to be shot from around waist height - though that can change depending on the model & the intent.







Horizon line picture