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Part one of a two-part explanation of the depth illusion in landscape photography.
Creating the Illusion of Depth in Landscape Photos
Navajo Highway, Utah.
Creating a convincing sensation of depth in a landscape helps create the illusion of distance in a two-dimensional image.
Learn to Create the Illusion of Depth in Your Landscapes

One of the creative problems inherent in all photographs is that they're flat.

Photographs exist in only two dimensions--they have height and width, but no depth. While a landscape may spread across miles, your photographs are only as deep as the paper they're printed on. The lack of a third dimension means it's up to you to create a believable illusion of distance in your photographs.

The reason that we see distance in everyday life is because humans have what is called "binocular vision" or two separate images overlapping that creates the depth illusion. The ability to sense distance can have some useful applications--like knowing when to stop walking before you walk off the end of a pier or how far to reach to scratch your knee.

Almost since the beginning of photography creative minds have tried to find clever ways to bring the third dimension into still photos and they've had some great successes. If you've ever looked at antique stereo cards using a Stereoscope, you know just how real the 3-D illusion can be: You feel as if you can reach in a pluck an apple from a tree. As a kid I was addicted to my View-Master 3D viewer and I just couldn't get enough of those round picture wheels. Mickey Mouse and Pluto really were hiding inside that viewer

Creating A Sense of Depth

While you can't get such intense a three-dimensional experience from an ordinary photograph, there are some visual tricks (also known as "depth cues") you can exploit to enhance the sensation of distance in your photographs. Knowing how depth is created is particularly useful in landscape photographs because one of the things you're trying to relate is the physical space involved.

Linear Perspective

One of the simplest and most direct ways to create a sense of distance in a landscape is to include a leading line, a cue that artists refer to as linear perspective. Lines work best when they start near the front edge of the image and go to the far horizon (as in my shot of the desert highway) and conclude at a single point ("one point" perspective). Highways, fences, rivers, and telephone poles are all things that can take the eye on a deep journey into your image.

Lines are like a siren call to the eye and they beg the eye to follow. It's hard to look at a photograph that includes a strong lead-in line and not trace its path--it's the visual equivalent of eating just one potato chip--tough to do!
When these lines are combined with what's calledl a "single vanishing point" the depth illustion gets even stronger. The vanishing point is created whenever all of the lines in a scene appear to be focsed on a single spot in the distance. In the photo of the military cemetary shown here (photographed in St. Augustine, Florida) I used the lines of the headstones appear to be all heading toward exactly that type of single vanishing point and the lure is that much stronger.


St. Augustine Military Cemetary Copyright 2007 Jeff wignall
Linear perspective is a powerful depth cue when it comes to creating a feeling of depth. Your eye can hardly help but follow the headstones to the end of the row.
St. Augustine Military Cemetary Copyright 2007 Jeff wignall
Often a simple thing like choosing the right camera orientation will help establish great depth. In this case I think the vertical shot has a far greater feeling of distance than the horizontal shot from exactly the same location.
Lake Winnipesaukee, New Hampshire. Copyright Jeff Wignall 2007
Haze causes distant mountain peaks to appear lighter than nearby peaks. This lightening exaggerates the sense of distance.
Aerial Perspective

If you've ever stood at a scenic overlook gazing out at a mountain range you've probably noticed that the rows of receding peaks seem to get lighter as they get farther away. That's a depth cue called aerial perspective. The buildup of haze (or mist or fog) as the peaks get more distant causes the more distant ones to look lighter; the brain interprets this tone change as distance.

The best time to find haze or fog is early or late in the day or just before or after a storm. And remember, while wide-angle lenses are generally better for exaggerating distance in a normal landscape, when it comes to aerial perspective, telephoto lenses (105mm or longer) compress the ever--lightening layers of a subject and further exaggerate the feeling of space. It's one time when a long lens actually helps create rather than eliminate depth. I shot the photo here from a highway overlook near Lake Winnipesaukee in New Hamsphire (where one of my favorite Bill Murray movies "What About Bob?" was filmed). The scene just appeared to go on forever and it was hard to tell if the distant hills were a few miles or a hundred miles away--and that feeling was created largely by the thick afternoon haze on a hot August afternoon.



Sunset photo of saguaro cactus and mountains taken in Tucson, Arizona by Jeff Wignall.
In this sunset photo taken in Tuscon, Arizona you can see how the layers of landscape are darker at the front and lighter in the distance which creates a sensation of distance in the brain.
More about creating the illusion of depth in landscape photos.





 
 
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