Carlito, did you not see my last post to you. I acknowledged that the abscence of sight lines is an issue for people (I personally do not think this necessarily matters, because obviously there is more way to prove a photo faked than just sight lines).
The highlighted portion is your problem. You are starting from a conclusion, not using the scientific method.
- Null Hypothesis = photos are real
- How to disprove the above = show they are fake
- How to show they are fake = sight line analysis of perspective, etc.
The sight line analysis will show what should be where in the frame. Then you can compare what
is in the frame to what
should be in the frame. Then you can ask photographers about things like forced perspective and how tight telephoto shots can compress foreground and background. Tweak your findings, get feedback here and add a sightline slide to each of the 4 photos in your presentation.
There are several good posts in this thread you can use to correct your perspective issues.
Mobertermy said:
That being said at some point I will do some work on the sight line issue - I've actually looked at some of the photos and I think the sight lines will help me.
Good. Just remember announcing "I have proof of photo manipulation" without having done the basic step of analyzing perspective isn't going to convince people, and that ...
Mobertermy said:
At the same time if sight lines are such an easy and obvious way to "debunk" the presentation, then why hasn't any one produced one that demonstrates this?
...the burden of proof is on
you, the one claiming photo manipulation. (but you REALLY should go back and read post 15 in this thread, now that you know where the traffic arm should be)
Mobertermy said:
Secondly, maybe you can help with my quandry. I don't think the photos correlate with reality, which is to say the photos represent one sight line, but the reality will be different. How do you suggest I deal with that issue?
Reality is reality. Again, you seem to be starting from a conclusion, which is the wrong way to go about it. Stop
assuming and start testing scientifically. There are people here and elsewhere who really understand photography. Asking questions with an open mind will get you answers.
I, for one, won't be bothered to look into this because I find the whole issue of comparing google earth, photos, and the like against what some guy remembered 6 years after a traumatic event to be a waste of my time. The whole idea is ridiculous, and the CIT guys appear to be bat guano insane.
That said, if you provide proper analysis, I'll view your presentation again with an open mind. Deal?