A camera lens sees the image upside down and then flips it. I'm going to talk about full frame, because that is our reference point. I've never been to a flat planet, so it might look different. Whether you think the earth is flat or round, it's going to look the same when you're a-sittin' on it! At least, I think so. Anyway, the point of the piece was that "The horizon looks pretty flat from here, no matter how you look at it." And then I tried to demonstrate why this would be true on a great big globe. If there's distortion, wouldn't you say it's pretty negligible? And the Pano shot distorts things all over the place, but if you hold it steady, the horizon line looks *pretty much* like real life. Pic 1 was actually angled lower than pic 2, but the line look the same. In fact, I did have the camera at different angles, but I (rather painstakingly) edited and cropped them so the horizon line matched. Fish-eye and other kinds, but I don't think my iPhone lens would. I think most lenses do not cause noticeable distortion. Couple points-not and expert, I could be wrong. Upvotes Follow Unfollow 5 years ago Created by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017
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