
Carolina Pines in my back yard, looking straight up. Used 18 mm focal length lens (effective 28.8 mm), and got fish-eye effect playing with the lens settings in Adobe Camera Raw.

Carolina Pines in my back yard, looking straight up. Used 18 mm focal length lens (effective 28.8 mm), and got fish-eye effect playing with the lens settings in Adobe Camera Raw.

In order to ease the amount of information processed, the human brain subconsciously engages in what is known as "selective perception." So even though the eye sees the same objective image, only a certain part is emphasized at any given time. Such emphasis is shown here by sharpening the focus …

amazing detail i say. using a retro adapter (self build). canon eos 400d, 18-55 kit actual diameter of the flower is about a dime (10mm). might not be the best technical photography, but makes me stun by what your camera sees and your eye does not… putting the motiv up …

I thought I’d try to take a few pictures from the dog’s eye level. They do not represent what the dog might see, but what a human would see if our eyes were a foot off the ground.

www.starvingartistry.net/2011/05/31/day-149/ You may look at this photo and think, "Hey, that dog has a pretty human expression!" Well, it’s because of how pronounced his eye is. And that’s because of an allergic reaction Daxter had from his vaccinations today. Poor dog, he got pretty itchy. And he looked …