Why do you take a photo of your eyes when you take a photo of 'vampire'?
Although current technology simplifies capturing art shots, the "red eye" effect is still the cause of ruining many of your beautiful pictures. Bright Side decided to investigate the cause of this "strange" effect.
In ambient light, you often have to open your eyes to allow light to enter. When the flash light hits your eyes, you won't have enough time to squint your eyes. Therefore, the amount of strong light from the lamp makes the scene light up and directly affects the eyeball, passing through the pupil to the rear blood vessels, reflecting red blood vessels on the veins. When the camera flash lights up reflecting this blood vessel, our eyes often have a "red" effect on the image.
Light directly affects the eyeball, passing through the pupil to the rear blood vessel.
The reason why the eyes are red is probably because you stare and o the camera's lens . You can eliminate the "red eye" effect in a simple way that is to avoid staring at the lens but just looking at a nearby light bulb before taking a picture.
To reduce the "red eye" effect , most modern cameras often flash the front flash before the flash officially blinks, so you have enough time to squint your eyes and adapt to it.
To avoid the "red eye" effect you should look at a nearby light bulb before taking a picture.
The intensity of light reflection of each person is different, depending on the size, age and eye color of each individual. People with bright skin and blue or green eyes are less likely to get melanin (pigment-forming epidermal cells), which can often be "red-eyed" when taking pictures.
High quality effects often appear on the human eye and animal eyes.
High-quality effects often appear on the human eye and animal eyes, especially in the eyes of nocturnal animals - the retina has a special reflective layer called the tapetum lucidum mirror that acts as mirror placed behind the eyes. This tissue helps animals see things better at night with actions like reflectors (retroreflector) , taking reflected light and directly reflecting it back to its original direction.
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