As in "feel sorry for them"?Flabbergasted wrote:Maybe they wanted to give them a homey feeling to help us "relate to them".
Fakery in Orbit: THE I$$
Re: Fakery in Orbit: THE ISS
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Re: Fakery in Orbit: THE ISS
Oh well, Brian - you've gotta give it to NASA : it is undeniably a wide-open, liberal and indiscriminative workplace !brianv wrote:Yes one might expect to see more high-brow looking individuals rather than a bunch of escapees from the St John of God Center for our less fortunate brothers and sisters.
( All testimonial faces used for the making of this ad were extracted from the NASA STAFF group pictures published here and here )
It feels good that such an eclectic & international bunch of folks are ensuring the continuing success-story of our outer space conquests.
Re: Fakery in Orbit: THE ISS
Source: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/gallery/ima ... 046603.jpg
All photos seem to be taken 5 21 2011 - here is one with the Pope popping in at the space center;
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Re: Fakery in Orbit: THE ISS
Wow, every computer screen image looks photoshopped as well as the signs the "employees" are holding and the screen images in the background. I caught the flip flops too. I would think that Nasa employees would be held to a higher standard.
Re: Fakery in Orbit: THE ISS
Might I point out this composite employee in the midst of that large photo!
Re: Fakery in Orbit: THE ISS
"All right, who took my stapler?!?!?"
Re: Fakery in Orbit: THE ISS
Yes, I remember your analysis. In fact I missed "Granma" when I found this photo. Oh, wait, finally I found her!simonshack wrote: Dear Agraposo,
You may wish to check out my 2011 analysis of the NASA staff imagery:
WARNING: graphic content - and fairly disturbing stuff!
http://www.cluesforum.info/viewtopic.ph ... 2#p2354502
STS-134 Gallery May 25, 2011 (to the left)
STS-135 Gallery July 14, 2011 (to the right)
And some of her colleagues (first row)
STS-135 Gallery July 13, 2011
Comparison
Last edited by agraposo on Thu Nov 15, 2012 12:00 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Fakery in Orbit: THE ISS
But I don't want to be so disrespectful with "Granma" (NASA astronaut Shannon Lucid), so I searched more images.
http://www.spacefacts.de/more/astronaut ... hannon.htm
Please, another pose!
http://www.spacefacts.de/more/astronaut ... hannon.htm
Please, another pose!
Re: Fakery in Orbit: THE ISS
I'd sure like to know what lighting setup the photographer used in those (probably faked) group photos above. It's extremely difficult to light a group like that with virtually no shadows. Unless they are all vampires, of course.
It looks to me like the photographer simply shot an empty room and then pasted in the people one by one.
It looks to me like the photographer simply shot an empty room and then pasted in the people one by one.
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Re: Fakery in Orbit: THE ISS
How strange: they use the exact same picture and then go to the trouble of making an almost imperceptible change in the hairline. Or does the software used to make these images automatically introduce all sorts of small random changes?
Re: Fakery in Orbit: THE ISS
It's possilbe that a small artifact has crept in from stretching and skewing the image, but it also could be a deliberate manual alteration to make it look slightly different than it's parent image.Flabbergasted wrote:How strange: they use the exact same picture and then go to the trouble of making an almost imperceptible change in the hairline. Or does the software used to make these images automatically introduce all sorts of small random changes?
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Re: Fakery in Orbit: THE ISS
I was just wondering: if the graphics perpware had some "freedom" to introduce small random changes for the sake of "reality", that might explain some of the curious little goofs we see in fake photographs and often attribute to incompetent photoshoppers. Like the change in the color of Breivik´s tie.
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Re: Fakery in Orbit: THE ISS
*
Great work, Agraposo - and all!
As it is, I have been taking another look at these fascinating NASA STAFF group "photos" today. Since the first day I saw them, they looked to me an awful lot as photoshopped composites - with simple cut-and-paste and repositioning of the various characters. But how to prove it?
Well, as always, the lighting of these images will help us determine a few things. Let's compare the shadowing of 2 of these group "photos". To be sure, the most striking fact of these NASA STAFF pictures is that the various rows of people don't seem to cast the slightest speck of shadow on the people behind them. This is quite an extraordinary 'strike of luck', as any wedding photographer will tell you. But wait, in the below image, we see some crisp shadows being cast by the LAST row of people:
Yet, in this other NASA STAFF group "photo", this back row of people casts NO shadows at all !
This alone goes to show that these images can hardly be authentic. But there's more. Anyone familiar with cutting-and-pasting in Photoshop will know that at times, if you're not careful, a bad silhouette cut will give away the whole trickery. Well, here is one such fail:
I then compared two other "NASA STAFF group photos" - obviously MEANT to have been shot on two slightly different timelines of the same photo session. Well, I am awestruck by the apparent discipline of most of these NASA employees - keeping an almost identical pose, expression and position - between the two photo shoots which, evidently, required everyone to stay put during the timelapse required for inviting and placing / removing different people into the crowd ! I really hope this comparison make you all laugh a big, hearty laugh!
You are welcome to believe that these are quite legit/authentic photographs. And I am welcome to believe that they are complete frauds !
Great work, Agraposo - and all!
As it is, I have been taking another look at these fascinating NASA STAFF group "photos" today. Since the first day I saw them, they looked to me an awful lot as photoshopped composites - with simple cut-and-paste and repositioning of the various characters. But how to prove it?
Well, as always, the lighting of these images will help us determine a few things. Let's compare the shadowing of 2 of these group "photos". To be sure, the most striking fact of these NASA STAFF pictures is that the various rows of people don't seem to cast the slightest speck of shadow on the people behind them. This is quite an extraordinary 'strike of luck', as any wedding photographer will tell you. But wait, in the below image, we see some crisp shadows being cast by the LAST row of people:
Yet, in this other NASA STAFF group "photo", this back row of people casts NO shadows at all !
This alone goes to show that these images can hardly be authentic. But there's more. Anyone familiar with cutting-and-pasting in Photoshop will know that at times, if you're not careful, a bad silhouette cut will give away the whole trickery. Well, here is one such fail:
I then compared two other "NASA STAFF group photos" - obviously MEANT to have been shot on two slightly different timelines of the same photo session. Well, I am awestruck by the apparent discipline of most of these NASA employees - keeping an almost identical pose, expression and position - between the two photo shoots which, evidently, required everyone to stay put during the timelapse required for inviting and placing / removing different people into the crowd ! I really hope this comparison make you all laugh a big, hearty laugh!
You are welcome to believe that these are quite legit/authentic photographs. And I am welcome to believe that they are complete frauds !
Re: Fakery in Orbit: THE ISS
I will not preclude that possibility, maybe some custom plugins for Photoshop have been developed for use in the fakery factory.Flabbergasted wrote:I was just wondering: if the graphics perpware had some "freedom" to introduce small random changes for the sake of "reality", that might explain some of the curious little goofs we see in fake photographs and often attribute to incompetent photoshoppers. Like the change in the color of Breivik´s tie.
^ Another for Simon
Re: Fakery in Orbit: THE ISS
Small random changes? Comparing again:Flabbergasted wrote:How strange: they use the exact same picture and then go to the trouble of making an almost imperceptible change in the hairline. Or does the software used to make these images automatically introduce all sorts of small random changes?
http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/gallery/ima ... 048501.jpg
http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/gallery/ima ... 063635.jpg