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Imagine being in front of the midpoint of a twenty mile long wall .
Imagine the wall is level and an even hight throughout it’s length
If I stand a mile from this mid point and take several shots of the wall I can stitch these shots together to form a panorama and things look pretty normal.
If I stand 50 feet from the wall and attempt the same the shots when stitched together to the left of the midpoint disappear to a point as do those on the left .
The shots at the mid point meet at an angle because of the convergance of each side of the centerline .A shot dead on the centerline should be parallel .
Two questions does the eye automatically correct for this situation and secondly is there a way of correcting this photographic effect .
—
mike hide
Imagine the wall is level and an even hight throughout it’s length
If I stand a mile from this mid point and take several shots of the wall I can stitch these shots together to form a panorama and things look pretty normal.
If I stand 50 feet from the wall and attempt the same the shots when stitched together to the left of the midpoint disappear to a point as do those on the left .
The shots at the mid point meet at an angle because of the convergance of each side of the centerline .A shot dead on the centerline should be parallel .
Two questions does the eye automatically correct for this situation and secondly is there a way of correcting this photographic effect .
—
mike hide
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