06-19-2016, 06:43 PM | #1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 2,384
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POV
Point Of View. I had been thinking of doing some research into this topic for quite some time. Part of it sparked by lots of pics of fish that did not appear to be the weights claimed (and vice versa for that matter). But also because the mind can and does play tricks on all of us. An example of this is to make 2 lines of equal length with one vertical and one horizontal, and one will appear longer than the other (even when you know they are the same). So, accidentally I was nudged in this direction when I caught my last WSB and asked a passerby to take a photo for me. The fish was hung on a dock piling a couple feet behind me (Where I weighed it). I did not even look at the photos until I got home, when I noticed how much difference a couple feet made. A 52# fish looked like a 25# fish. Here is the dock pic along with the only other shots I got of the fish. Even in the pic with the kayak in the foreground, it makes the fish look short. The Cooler shot finally does the fish justice (but of course I never used the other pics . I was quite disappointed that nobody called me out on the size of my fish in the photo (even though I knew that there was already a larger fish to be posted caught a week before mine for WCW).
So, I told my buddies that we (I) needed to take our next big fish and do some comparison shots. I had totally spaced that out, until someone asked if I wanted a picture with my jackpot fish from the Islander trip. Same distance behind me of arms length and a normal hold in front of me (not extended out). Of course, again I only posted the small looking stuff, and actually had to crop the tape shot since it showed the entire fish. The posed shots were astounding on the difference in apparent size. There are lots of other tricks to making your fish look larger or smaller, like shot from down to up, sloped up and away, horizontal vs vertical pose etc. But it is pretty interesting what a small change in POV can make in the 1000 words a picture tells. |
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