
(click to get a 1000pix version. this is the minimum size to get a decent effect...)
Once more... "A matter of scale".
After reading the book "Perception and Imaging" by Richard D. Zackia, I went out and started to experiment with the effect of introducing a wrong scale object into a simple shot of something quite familar, like a stone or some tree bark. I wanted to see how the brain reacts to see such a object, how it changes the perception, or how much easier it is for the brain to see something different, just by adding a wrong reference to a known scale.
AMOS N°001: a simple stone, approx. 30 cm height, 45° angle
AMOS N°2: tree bark (birch), approx. 15 cm width, four little color spots added
AMOS N°3: another stone, approx. 20 cm height
AMOS N°4: fallen tree with moss, approx. 15 cm shown here
I think N°2 is quite interesting. Without the color specks, it's clearly a tree bark - what else could it be. However, as soon as the brain detects the color specks, and interprets them as people, the whole scale changes, and at least myself has no problem seeing this picture as a aerial shot.
Interesting thing to contemplate about that effect, and what it means to place other objects into the main scene.
cheers
®