knarf wrote:
Nothing new under the sun:
http://tinyurl.com/zft854m
My favorite photos of a Sprite:
http://www.red4est.com/lrc/racer_html/miscpix.html
although not for their photographic quality.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/91/Austin_Healey_%27Frogeye%27_Sprite_-_Flickr_-_exfordy_%282%29.jpg
The weird thing is that if you do a websearch on bugeye these days, you
get a bunch of pictures of Subies.
Frogeyes were supposed to have pop up headlights, which worked like the
ones on a 928, however it was determined that it was a pound cheaper to
make the car with them permanently up.
Cheers,
frank
On December 4, 2015 1:44:39 PM EST, Mark C<[email protected]> wrote:
I sometimes wonder if automobile designers are deliberately trying
anthropomorphize their products, but at the end of the day two head
lights ("eyes") and one grill ("mouth") will result in some resemblance
to a human or at least vertebrate face. Adding a third light would
change that -
http://forums.motortrend.com/70/6735296/the-artists-loft/the-return-of-tucker/index.html
I keep looking for alternate subjects other than insects and spiders,
but despite several test shoots I still have not found much that is
interesting at these magnifications.
Mark
On 12/3/2015 11:56 PM, Igor PDML-StR wrote:
Great work, as usual, Mark!
I do not find these insect particularly ugly or threatening.
In many (most?) cases those impressions both concepts are
experience-based.
Naturally, a human brain tends to like what we are used to, and
dislike (or even get threatened by) what is very disparate from
ourselves: we fear unknown.
I think it is very similar to the roots of xenophobia (and a few
other phobias). I also think a similar mechanism is responsible (at
least in part) for face recognition problems across races.
Mark, I see why you said this insect looks like a puppy.
It does a little bit.
By the way, this is actually a great example of that we tend to
relate
new objects to something that we are familiar with.
Very similarly, we find human-like features in cars (headlights ->
eyes,
grill -> face), and classify some grill features as friendly or
aggressive.
Igor
PS. I find it interesting that a few months ago I was shooting a
wasp,
thinking it was an ant queen. :-)
You might remember it: http://42graphy.org/misc/_IR27045.jpg
On Thu, Dec 3, 2015 at 10:45 AM, Mark C wrote:
Since posting this I've learned that it is actually an ant queen,
and
not a
wasp, not that it makes much difference to the viewer. As nasty as
ti
looks,
the whole frame is covering less than 3mm of space, so the ant is
very tiny
indeed.
On 12/3/2015 12:19 AM, Boris Liberman wrote:
Certainly a creature one wouldn't want to meet in a dark alley :-).
On 12/3/2015 1:48, Mark C wrote:
Looks a little like a puppy to me:
http://www.markcassino.com/b2evolution/index.php/small-wasp-1
or on flickr:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/markcassino/23370180022/
8x lifesized. Pentax K01 and K 24 f3.5, lots of extension and
flash.
Comments welcome!
Mark
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