Monday, January 26, 2009

implied infinity (photography)

In photography, implied infinity, is the viewer's assumption, when a repeated pattern is cut off, that the pattern continues indefinitely beyond the frame. For example: If you take a photo of ten people crowded together, surrounded by grass on both right and left, the viewer will only see ten people, but if you cut of parts of people's bodies on either side, the view will assume that the ten people are only a small part of a big crowd. Implied infinity has bearing on how you crop a photo: Do you want the group or pattern to seem finite or infinite? It may also have relevance in other arts--for example, in the editing of a sound or a piece of video.

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