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  • 2019-04-17 (xsd:date)
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  • Is This Photograph of Notre Dame Burning with the Eiffel Tower Directly in the Background Real? (en)
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  • The fire at Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris on 15 April 2019 produced numerous hauntingly beautiful images of that tragedy. One such image, which received more than a million likes after it was shared on Instagram by reality star Kris Jenner, so encapsulated the moment that many viewers questioned its authenticity: The website meaww.com, for instance, claimed that the image was geographically impossible, writing that This particular angle of the picture is geographically impossible as the two popular landmarks are located far from each other and cannot be captured in the same shot in that angle. Regardless of the skepticism, this image was indeed a genuine photograph showing the Eiffel Tower directly in the background of the burning Notre Dame Cathedral. The image was snapped by photographer A.G. Photographe on the day of the fire. A.G. Photographe explained on Facebook that the image was taken from Vincennes with a Nikon D850 and a 600mm Sigma telephoto lens: One of the reasons viewers were skeptical about this image is that it appeared to show the Eiffel Tower and the Notre Dame Cathedral too close together. After all, these two architectural achievements sit approximately 2.5 miles apart, but in the photograph they appear to be nearly next to one another. This is due to A.G. Photographe's use of a rather large telephoto lens, which compresses distances so that background and foreground elements seem much closer together than they actually are. The website Shutterbug provided an explanation on how a telephoto lens can alter a scene: They compress the elements that make up the composition. This means that they make the foreground seem like it is closer to the background than it really is. The longer the lens, the more compressed the image is. This viral image wasn't the only one that A.G. Photographe took of the Notre Dame fire. Here's another one showing the Eiffel Tower in the background of the fire that was posted to Facebook: A number of similar photographs taken long before the fire can be found on A.G. Photographe's social media profiles. In other words, this image was not a fluke: The photographer was well-practiced at capturing the Paris skyline before setting out to shoot the Notre Dame fire and knew the best way to capture an arresting image. Here's another image from A.G. Photographe snapped a few days before the fire: (en)
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