posted on Dec, 19 2018 @ 10:58 PM
a reply to:
Gargoyle91
This picture is of a butterfly taken by an iPhone on the Panoramic setting.
I'll explain how I know. Because I frequently take pictures of moving objects on the panoramic setting because the pano setting needs objects to
remain static in order to capture them. If an object is moving the software in pano mode cuts them and splices them together and since the object is
moving the resulting image turns out to be chopped and morphed.
I've done this a thousand times. It's just a butterfly.
EDIT: Anyone with an iPhone can replicate this effect. For those that are unfamiliar with Pano mode you have to move your camera from left to right
to capture a large panoramic picture. If the subject you are shooting has any moving parts it will render them chopped and oddly pieced together. I
like to take pictures of people walking in this mode. The result is very Picasso-esque. Half heads, legs missing or sometimes 3 legs where 2 would
be, an arm protruding from a midsection, etc.
edit on 19-12-2018 by Outlier13 because: (no reason given)