Techniques of
Photo Fakery
Photo Fakery
1: Inserting details. This includes placing an element from one photo into another to create a composite image, reproducing a detail of the photo by cloning it, superimposing an image onto another, or drawing-in details.
2: Deleting details. This is usually done by extending background elements over the unwanted detail. Or one can crop out the unwanted detail.
3: Manipulating elements within the photo. For instance, adjusting the color, resizing details, or rotating or moving details.
4: falsifying the caption.
5: Staging the scene. This is considered fakery particularly in photojournalism. Varieties of staging a scene include using models and cutouts and inserting a prop into the scene.
6: Trick angles. The most common example of this is the use of forced perspective.
2: Deleting details. This is usually done by extending background elements over the unwanted detail. Or one can crop out the unwanted detail.
3: Manipulating elements within the photo. For instance, adjusting the color, resizing details, or rotating or moving details.
4: falsifying the caption.
5: Staging the scene. This is considered fakery particularly in photojournalism. Varieties of staging a scene include using models and cutouts and inserting a prop into the scene.
6: Trick angles. The most common example of this is the use of forced perspective.
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The Hoax Photo Archive
A gallery of photo fakery throughout history.
Years Archived:
1840-1900 | 1900-1919 | 1920-1939 | 1940-1959 | 1960-1979 | 1980-1999 | 2000-2004 | 2005-Present
A gallery of photo fakery throughout history.
Years Archived:
1840-1900 | 1900-1919 | 1920-1939 | 1940-1959 | 1960-1979 | 1980-1999 | 2000-2004 | 2005-Present
Time Period: 1940-1959
The Commissar Vanishes (ca. 1940)
Soviet censors deleted the People's Commissar for Internal Affairs from this photo after he fell out of favor. ...» |
The Nazi Air Marker Hoax (August 10, 1942)
Pictures of unusual shapes in farmers' fields led to fears that the Nazis were planning an air attack on the United States. ...» |
The Master Race (May 8, 1943)
The British Army created this picture of an unkempt German soldier as part of its propaganda efforts. ...» |
Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima (February 23, 1945)
This is probably the most famous photo from World War II. It was not staged, despite persistent rumors to the contrary. ...» |
Red Army Flag Over Reichstag (May 2, 1945)
This photo was both staged and doctored in an attempt to create a Soviet version of the Americans' Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima image. ...» |
The Tydings Affair (1950)
This fake picture of Senator Tydings chatting with the head of the American Communist Party may have caused Tydings to lose his campaign for reelection. ...» |
Miss Perfect Profile (ca. 1950)
The head of a modeling agency added creative captions, such as "Miss Perfect Profile," to the photos of his models in order to get newspapers to print them. ...» |
The Kiss at City Hall (April 1, 1950)
Robert Doisneau admitted in 1993 that he paid models to stage this romantic Parisian scene. ...» |
Venusian Scoutcraft (December 13, 1952)
What George Adamski claimed was a photo of a UFO looks suspiciously like a lampshade with ping pong balls glued to it. ...» |
Dr. Schweitzer in the Congo (1954)
More than thirty years after its initial publication, this famous photo by W. Eugene Smith was discovered to be two photos composited together. ...» |
The Peppered Moth (1955)
The many biology textbooks that used this image did not reveal that the moths were dead and glued to the bark. ...» |
All text Copyright © 2011 by Alex Boese, except where otherwise indicated. All rights reserved.
