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Most of these tricks can be done in an ordinary darkroom, too,
but that takes more time and the cost of materials mounts up as you
discard the prints that didn't quite work.
At this scale and scanner resolution, it's not obvious that the
elephants and the sunset came from different pictures. The
oddities in the lower right cloudy area could just be artifacts of
poor scanning, and so could the extra-fuzzy bit of the big
elephant's rump.
.
This busker is deliberately unreal, like an old hand-tinted
postcard.
And here's something you CAN'T do in a traditional darkroom....
Mount and frame this picture of Red Tarn and hang it on your
wall. Who could tell it's not a print of an oil painting?
* * *
Even without the distortion, it would be obvious that the
picture of the train and the sphinx was a fake. And even if little
Charlotte were swinging from a full-sized bough instead of a twig it
should be obvious that the image was built up from two different
photographs. Can you see why?
It's all to do with lighting.
First and most obvious is what is known as Colour Temperature.
In both pictures, the background has the golden colours and crisp shadows of clear sunlight coming at a low angle (for those who know
which way sphinxes face, it is clear that they were photographed
early in the morning - bravo, Keith!), but the little girl
and the train are much bluer.
Second (and it may have been nagging you without you being
able to put your finger on the cause) the directions of the light
shining on Charlotte and on the train are different from the
directions of the light shining on their backgrounds. In Charlotte's
case, there are no shadows - it looks as if she was photographed on
a bright overcast day, but the highlights on the swing and on her shoes
suggest to that Keith may have used flash to help out a bit. I'll
ask him.
Motto: if you are seriously trying to fake a picture, you have
to be VERY careful about lighting compatibility amongst the
components you patch together (now that UFO pictures are in colour
rather than black & white, a lot of the faking is much easier to
see). You can use a 'digital darkroom',
or a traditional one, to correct the way the colours look on each
component - what you can't do is change the direction of the light,
or switch between clear and diffused light.
Taking the picture is only the first step, but now anyone can
make simple changes that create new, exciting or amusing images. Why
not give it a try?
Have fun.
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