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Still puzzled as to how this is done, we had a good look and could see no wires or poles.
This young Italian couple are, for sure, at the top of their trade.
| Brand: | NIKON |
| Camera: | Nikon Coolpix S3000 |
| Recording media: | JPEG (digital) |
| Focal Length: | 9.8mm |
| Lens Max Aperture: | f/3.2 |
| Aperture: | f/4.8 |
| Shutter Speed: | 1/400sec |
| Exposure Comp: | 0.0 |
| ISO: | 80 |
| Exposure Mode: | Program AE |
| Metering Mode: | Multi-segment |
| Flash: | Auto, Did not fire |
| White Balance: | Auto |
| Title: | HOW ? |
| Username: | |
| Uploaded: | 29 Oct 2012 - 10:05 AM |
| Tags: | General, Humour / fun |
| VS Mode Rating |
101 (53.85% won) These stats show the percentage of wins and the rating score that your photo has achieved. You can go to the VS Mode by clicking on this icon. Signup to e2Signup to e2 to see which photo this has won or lost against in the vs mode |
| Votes: | 5 |
Comments
I've seen this sort of thing many times. The arms and hands holding the poles are false although they look quite real.
The real arms/hands are tucked inside of the clothing.
The person below is sat on a metal plate and the false arms are attached to it. The person above is sat on a small metal seat that's attached to the post/false arms/hands.
Ken.
ps, I was talking to someone who did this sort of thing and they explained it to me.
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