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The technique of "camera obscura" Abelardo Morell has its own living from photography to interior design throughout the world. "What I like to create this gallery, so this is what I'm seeing a strange and at the same time a natural combination of internal and external", - he said. To take a picture of this type, it covers all the windows or plastic bags that were dark. He then does a small hole in them. Then form an inverted image projected on the outside wall in the room. It focuses widescreen device in the picture on the wall. Recently, Morrell has created a light-proof tent that with periscope optics projects a view of a landscape on any surface under the tent. In this darkened space, it uses the pavilion camera to capture the effect. "I think it's wonderful" sandwich "of two realities, overlapping - the photographer says. - The camera-tent now allows me to use the camera obscura in new places in the world. That is to say, now I have my own portable studio.
Brooklyn Bridge. Picture taken through a tent on the roof.
Times Square, New York.
Brooklyn Bridge.
Downtown Manhattan, overlooking the east side. Picture taken with the help of a camera tent.
Jordon Pond in Acadia National Park, Maine.
A snapshot of the landscape in Florence, made with a camera-tent.
View on the outskirts of Florence, with the books.
The view from the bedroom of Florence.