Find your own tripod holes with Street View !

Michel Hardy-Vallée

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A while ago, discussing the following photo, I was trying to triangulate the position I took it from based on the satellite view of Google Maps.


That was before Street View.



The GoogleCam, being obviously a super-wide angle, gives a rather distinct field of view from the 50mm I used. But what I find interesting is that, even though I'm comparing two images here, I have the intuitive feeling that the Google shot is "reality" whereas my picture is a representation.

Both are representations, utter interpretations, but somehow the Google shot plays on different conventions.

What I found strange, visually compelling:


is also just part of everyday life:


Some people have already started collecting weird grab shots from Street View (muggings in progress, oddities, naked people, etc.), but these pictures only work because they are part of the conventions of street photography/urban landcape.

More Street View coverage in, let's say, the deserted areas, would eventually bring us closer to virtual landscape photography....
 

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perkeleellinen

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I once toyed with this project where I'd set up my camera on a tripod to make a 'proper' B&W photo, then using a P&S with colour film I'd take a few steps back and take a photo of the tripod / camera in situ. This was, I felt, a sort of reality / representation contrast.
 

aaronmichael

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Well in a way, no matter how you frame a shot, it's all a representation of reality. When taking a photograph you're always leaving something out of the frame and therefore distorting what is really there. Conclusion: all photograph are a lie
 

bsdunek

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Well in a way, no matter how you frame a shot, it's all a representation of reality. When taking a photograph you're always leaving something out of the frame and therefore distorting what is really there. Conclusion: all photograph are a lie

But, such beautiful lies!
 
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