Saturday, February 13, 2016

Tiny Spherical Worlds

Hey guys so here I am with another blog post. So what dose composite images mean well it means to add many different photos to make an image that exiles the limit a camera can offer which brings us to the start of are new blog post.Why do you need composite images why can't you just use one photo? Well you want everything you do to be at your best and composite images are a way to elevate your image. Another reason why is because it adds elements to your image. In are new project we will need to use composite images. Do you think you need composite images? I really think that it's a great way to bump up your project.

So in are new project were doing one a polar pano and second a spherical pano. You may ask whats the difference well in a polar pano you make it look like your looking down at a little world. If you look at a spherical pano it looks like you are in the planet. Another difference is that if you look at a spherical it looks like your looking into a crystal ball and if you look at a polar it looks like you looking right at the subject has if you were there. Polar is kinda like a birds eye view or a high angle and a spherical is like an ants eye view or a low angle. Also in a polar the sky is a big part of the picture and in a spherical theres a balance of both. I think its safe to say that there the completely different.

I think that my spherical and polar pano are convincing is that to me it really look like a tiny world and like a snow globe if you add effects. Also I put a lot of hard work into making my tiny world. A big reason I think that my tiny world is convincing is because my horizon line is nice and straight. I really wanted to make sure nothing was sticking out for example a tree sticking out into space. Another reason is because I wont have a tree that turns into a bush or a bush thats growing stairs out of it. A huge reason my tiny world looks real is because it wasn't takin indoors it was takin outside. I also took my pictures vertical not horizontal.