Why do we always look different in photographs than we do in the mirror?

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  • hazydayzhazydayz Posts: 6,909
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    I think we've all learned something in this thread and that is we all look ugly in photographs.
  • tenofspadestenofspades Posts: 12,875
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    You can look different in different cameras also. As I've found out.
  • hooterhooter Posts: 30,206
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    kitty86 wrote: »
    I got told that the way you see yourself in the mirror depends on how much confidence in yourself you have.

    sheesh, I must be sufferin from very low self-esteem:D
  • [Deleted User][Deleted User] Posts: 16
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    I'm not a bad looking guy but I hate having my picture taken nowadays.

    Even the most basic phone camera is in high definition. Nobody wants their flaws magnified that much! :D
  • hooterhooter Posts: 30,206
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    I'm not a bad looking guy but I hate having my picture taken nowadays.

    Even the most basic phone camera is in high definition. Nobody wants their flaws magnified that much! :D

    Yes...It`s the high definition photos that are the problem...............;-)

    Has another hasty look at me face in the mirror to reassure meself I is really a stunner
  • hazydayzhazydayz Posts: 6,909
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    I'm sexy in the mirror.
  • alr837alr837 Posts: 1,843
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    Also depends on the focal length of the lens being used, it is quite shocking seeing how zooming in and out can change features on your face/body. Far better for person with camera to move closer/ further away
  • debdawdebdaw Posts: 91
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    Glad to know it's not just me that feels like this. I definitely look better in the mirror. Also, for some bizarre reason I appear to have a waist in the mirror which seems to disappear in photos!
  • SnrDevSnrDev Posts: 6,094
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    Mr Dos wrote: »
    If left and right are swapped in a mirror, how come top and bottom are the same ?
    They're not swapped. Stand in front of a mirror and your left hand is on the left of the image in the mirror. Your right hand is on the right. You could draw a million imaginary lines from your physical self to the same part of your image in the mirror, and every one of those lines would be a parallel straight line to the corresponding point. There is no reversal, in any plane.
  • bart4858bart4858 Posts: 11,436
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    SnrDev wrote: »
    They're not swapped. Stand in front of a mirror and your left hand is on the left of the image in the mirror. Your right hand is on the right. You could draw a million imaginary lines from your physical self to the same part of your image in the mirror, and every one of those lines would be a parallel straight line to the corresponding point. There is no reversal, in any plane.

    Swapped or not, if you hold up a poster, book or any handwriting to the mirror, the reflection will show it reversed as right to left instead of left to right. It's difficult to explain that with the reversal of depth (Z) coordinate, as paper doesn't have depth.

    (Although, it you imagine the writing is on a piece of glass or clear plastic, and hold it in front of you facing the mirror, what the mirror shows is the same back-to-front version that you can see through the glass.)
  • AlrightmateAlrightmate Posts: 73,120
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    grauniad wrote: »
    The photograph is much more representative of how you look than a mirror. When your picture is taken, you usually are not aware of what the camera sees. When you look in a mirror, you will be 'posing' , looking at yourself from the best angle, in the best light. The best photo will probably be taken looking at your own reflection.
    A mirror is the best 'camera' you will ever own.

    I'm not sure I can agree with that. Because I generally don't tend to pose in front of the mirror, and camera lenses can have the tendency to distort your features due to the nature of a camera lens.

    If a photograph is taken a far distance away, and then zoomed in, as some portraits are, it will flatten everything out a bit.
  • AlrightmateAlrightmate Posts: 73,120
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    I would've thought a mirror view is more representative and accurate, because cameras vary in quality.

    I agree. If the mirror is completely flat there should be no distortion.
    A camera can make you look different depending on other factors such as the type of lens and/or distance from the subject, and even with some cameras internal image processing algorithms.
  • AlrightmateAlrightmate Posts: 73,120
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    Here's an example with pictures of how much the camera lens can distort the features of your face....
    http://gizmodo.com/5857279/this-is-how-lenses-beautify-or-uglify-your-pretty-face
    Here's another example with pictures which speaks about distance from the camera using the same lens....
    https://bakerdh.wordpress.com/2012/05/05/face-distortion-is-not-due-to-lens-distortion/

    The camera does lie.
    As most consumer kit lens are probably around 18-50mm and perhaps aren't the best for retaining facial dimensions you can see how you can look different in photos compared to how you look in the mirror.

    It also ties in with the idea of certain people being photogenic. Being photogenic doesn't exactly mean that you are more beautiful than somebody else. It just means that your facial proportions when reproduced with the most commonly used lens will be distorted to look better.
  • Another POVAnother POV Posts: 2,214
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    kitty86 wrote: »
    I got told that the way you see yourself in the mirror depends on how much confidence in yourself you have.

    I see a younger version of Dad. :(
  • SnrDevSnrDev Posts: 6,094
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    bart4858 wrote: »
    Swapped or not, if you hold up a poster, book or any handwriting to the mirror, the reflection will show it reversed as right to left instead of left to right. It's difficult to explain that with the reversal of depth (Z) coordinate, as paper doesn't have depth.

    (Although, it you imagine the writing is on a piece of glass or clear plastic, and hold it in front of you facing the mirror, what the mirror shows is the same back-to-front version that you can see through the glass.)
    It's reflection not rotation. Your brain overrides that to interpret the image as reversed, but it's only reflected.

    If you held up transparent paper with writing on it and looked through it into the reflected image, you'd see the same things in the foreground and in the mirror.
  • panixspanixs Posts: 920
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    Its because the image in the mirror isnt you its your evil twin from an alternative universe trying to escape! :)
  • paulsh1paulsh1 Posts: 2,245
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    One of the scary things about growing older is looking back at photos taken 20 years or so ago,which at the time you were hideously embarrassed about!

    Now I think " My god,I wish I looked like that now!"
  • SoundboxSoundbox Posts: 6,247
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    Has anyone here ever taken a 'selfie'? The very idea of a self portrait starts me worrying and when I appear on the phone screen...well I feel all shaken.
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