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These simple hacks can let your creative side take over your phone camera to express your creativity, without the need for any app or extra expense on equipment. 1)
The first is not an in-camera effect, but is achieved by printing the film backwards in an optical printer, starting from the final frame and working to the initial one. (This requires a true optical effect, since simply playing the film in reverse when exposing it onto a new negative causes it to come out upside down.) [11] [12]
The shot follows Mikey's short walk between the two settings, and the camera pans to the side and tracks backwards away from Junior's car, causing the background to "grow" in size as the cinematographer zooms the lens in and the camera moves backwards. Here, the effect is used to avoid a compromise that would otherwise be necessary: a longer ...
Many large format cameras present the image of the scene being photographed as a flipped image through their viewfinders. Some photographers regard this as a beneficial feature, as the unfamiliarity of the format allows them to compose the elements of the picture properly without being distracted by the actual contents of the scene.
For example, at Boost Mobile, an Apple iPhone 15 currently retails for $399.99, while you can get an iPhone 14 for around $17.50 a month on a payment plan. Compare that to the Apple iPhone 16 ...
A camera obscura (pl. camerae obscurae or camera obscuras; from Latin camera obscūra ' dark chamber ') [1] is the natural phenomenon in which the rays of light passing through a small hole into a dark space form an image where they strike a surface, resulting in an inverted (upside down) and reversed (left to right) projection of the view outside.
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This is a variation on the shift technique in which the object is turned upside down and placed on the scanner, scanned, moved over and scanned again. This produces stereos of a range objects as large as about 6" across down to objects as small as a carrot seed. This technique goes back to at least 1995. See the article Scanography for more ...