That's what I thought. This photo has been tampered with somehow. Something, but I'm not sure what, has been removed.Bikerkilt wrote:I don't know I zoom out to 500 and can see the lines on the floor.
Derek
That's what I thought. This photo has been tampered with somehow. Something, but I'm not sure what, has been removed.Bikerkilt wrote:I don't know I zoom out to 500 and can see the lines on the floor.
It appears that this has been photo shopped - the folks in the distance are casting shadows on the tile - where this individualDerek Plattis wrote:That's what I thought. This photo has been tampered with somehow. Something, but I'm not sure what, has been removed.Bikerkilt wrote:I don't know I zoom out to 500 and can see the lines on the floor.
Derek
I just took another look at the image, and whilst there's not really enough to work with properly I have no reason to believe that it's a fabrication. I also played some local tricks to stretch the contrast which pointed out some other things in the image.r.m.anderson wrote:It appears that this has been photo shopped - the folks in the distance are casting shadows on the tile - where this individual is placed I don't discern a shadow or even a hint of one.
True enough, what emerges from the camera does not lie -- It's what one does to it afterwards.weeladdie18 wrote:Every picture tells a story and the camera never tells a lie.
I read an interview of a photographer a while back who insisted that a photo ALWAYS lies. It only shows a snapshot out of context, never the whole story, essentially a lie by omition.weeladdie18 wrote:
Every picture tells a story and the camera never tells a lie....................
Does the photographer record images of life as he sees life, or life as he wishes to see life ?Dust wrote:I read an interview of a photographer a while back who insisted that a photo ALWAYS lies. It only shows a snapshot out of context, never the whole story, essentially a lie by omition.weeladdie18 wrote:
Every picture tells a story and the camera never tells a lie....................
KellyRain thank you for your varied sightings in the wild ...what are your current daytime temperatures .KellyRain wrote:So some sightings in the wild over the holiday break here in Tokyo.
1. Koenji - One of the indie fashionable music spots in Tokyo. A town where you see alternative fashion all the time. Saw one guy, likely late 40's in a long floor length ethnic skirt.
2. Shibuya - Very fashionable district for younger people in central Tokyo. Saw three guys in skirts in one outing. a. cross dressing guy with his girlfriend. Purple dress. b. Mode Kei (mode fashion) long Yohji Yamamoto ( I think ) skirt. c. Guy in a punkish short skirt over jeans in Shibuya.
3. Yokohama - Young guy in a straight black skirt with slender shirt and coat over.