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Perspective correction for regular photo
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I guess if your'e "getting into" architectural photography a tilt / shift lens would be useful. If you ARE an architectural photographer, that would be a novelty or a backup. The view camera is their supreme tool. It's a pain now with digital so pervasive - there aren't any 4x5 instant capture backs. Scan backs are a pain and view cameras for tiny instant capture backs are a pain too. Anyway - a view camera has a flexible lens standard and film standard. The basic rule is, the film plane controls the geometry (if it's parallel to the subject, all lines will be parallel), the lens plane determines focus. If the camera is at an angle to a planar subject, you tilt the lens such that imaginary lines drawn through the subject plane, the lens plane and the film plane all meet at some imaginary point in the distance. Right. And you look at the image upside down too. That could explain a LOT bout me.... But viol's question had to do with photos in which the building was NOT the primary subject, so I'm sticking to what I said! [This message has been edited by Steve (edited 03-14-2004).]
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