This time, however, the mirrors are concave, so the images are inverted. In each mirror you can see the other mirror and a distorted view in our dining room. The left mirror has our mantel clock and the right mirror has a large, uh, mirror. In a recent shot · http://365project.org/rhoing/365/2011-02-28 · the “mirror” was convex so the image — like automobile passenger-side mirrors — was not inverted. (The object is a small, fold-out speaker set for an mp3 player.)
Retired economics professor (“dismal scientist”). Married 40+ years to the love of my life; we have two grown daughters, both married, two granddaughters and a...
@oneinodd@michelleyoung Thank you, Lisa & Shells! I think I was too close, but that's the old-school fill-the-frame mentality. I have to learn to shoot the alternatives as well. That's one of the reasons I'm here looking at everyone else's amazing images!
@rhoing I dont think you were too close.. I htink its perfectly set up, being further back, you would have missed some of the detail that you have managed to capture in the reflections.