40 Times The World Said ‘No, Thank You’ To Gravity, As Seen On This Group
You don't need to know much about photography to know it goes hand-in-hand with gravity. And we ain't talking about trying to capture your little sibling or significant other in mid-air for that Instagrammable pic (we've all been there). We're talking about turning the world on its axis with a simple click of your camera.
With over 43,000 mind-bending photography enthusiasts, the Confusing Gravity group is a go-to place for pics that make dear old Newton look silly and our brains confused. From people standing on top of filing cabinets as if it's some sort of skyscraper to vehicles hurtling through the air, we're still not sure what kind of cheat codes these photographers were using. But the results, mind-boggling as they are, speak for themselves.
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If You Flip Your Phone, It's A Completely New Story
Before we go on and speak about gravity-defying photographs, let's take a step back and look at the origins of motion photography. In a bold move back in 1872, Leland Stanford, the former governor of California and a savvy railroad tycoon who would go on to establish Stanford University, made a daring decision.
Fueling an ongoing debate whether, during its gait, all four of a horse's hooves are simultaneously off the ground, he sought to settle the score once and for all. His solution? Hiring the eccentric English photographer, Eadweard Muybridge, to capture the elusive truth.
If You Turn The "Frozen Water Under A Pier" Photo Upside Down It Turns Into An Industrial Cityscape
Muybridge, driven by this audacious challenge, embarked on a six-year quest to unravel the mysteries of the stallion movement. In a groundbreaking experiment, he strategically positioned twelve trip-wire cameras along a racetrack, aiming to freeze every stride of a galloping horse.
After a while, he had it: a fleeting instant when the majestic beast soared through the air, liberated from earthly constraints, with not a single hoof touching the ground. Perhaps the first levitation photo in the history of photography which paved the way for motion pictures.
This Picture Of My Kitten In His Cat Tree Always Makes Me Laugh
Perspective
Now that we know a silly bet propelled the way for moving pictures, let's get back to the present day - a time when technology allows us to plant cameras on pretty much anything (thanks, GoPro!) and bend the laws of gravity without using only a pinch of Photoshop. But what is it about these gravity-defying stills that capture our attention?
Free Fall
Confusing Gravity
Well, for one, this style of photography may seem effortless and whimsical, but it demands meticulous planning, technical expertise, and flawless execution. Also, a lot of experimentation, as Erick Hercules, a Sony Alpha Ambassador whose gravity-defying works have been featured on billboards in Times Square and auctioned at the Guggenheim Museum, told us.
Stargate Effect Done By Aerial Drone Shot
Crow Hopped As I Took His Photo
"When I started out, I was not aware of levitation photographers. It was years later I discovered Natsumi Hayashi who was doing the same some years earlier," Hercules explained to Bored Panda over an email. However, Hercules attributes his initial inspiration to a serendipitous encounter with a 2006 Lacoste campaign by Tom Munro, a London-based fashion photographer, right across from Lincoln Center, across the street from where he studied.
ʍoǝɯ
He's a ginger. We grey tabbies are much more sensible. (A certain grey tabby, before we got a kitten, used to run up the door frame and hang by her claws at light switch level. She could hang for several seconds. Much more sensible.) *scratches the soft can-opener for telling*
"That image always stuck with me. So when I first started in 2014, I kind of replicated the person jumping. It was a couple of months later that I began to develop and experiment with my own different techniques. At first with my hand in the picture and then later throwing things in the air and making them appear like they were really floating."
It was only a few years after that, the Hercules technique really kicked off, inspiring him to launch the #WeLevitate movement in 2015, a global community of aspiring levitation photographers under the slogan of "original no-photoshop levitation creators."
When One Sits On The Wall, Obviously The Other Has To, Too
Bicyclist Emergency
As Hercules tells us, "It quickly became a global niche for dancers and photographers who were into this sort of aesthetic. Some of them helped further the way in which levitation was used so they became part of the team." #WeLevitate is currently endorsed by Sony, Nike, World of Dance, as well as artists like J Balvin.
Went For A Walk This Morning
Storm Damage In Iowa
Poor tree. Imagine living for two decades and being ripped out of the ground by a effin hurricane
"Most of the visual stories being told through levitation have a high degree of tension that needs resolution," Hercules explained, noting that he enjoys the surrealistic quality gravity-defying photography employs. "As humans, we are creatures that search for stability, but by showing a subject in mid-air, we are taking away the 'before and after' of the image, leaving the audience in a state of limbo, giving them a chance to question 'How was this done?'"
Someone Had A Bad Day But Got A Great Pic Out Of It
Streets Of San Francisco
I believe this is real, the house is actually level and it's the road/street that is very steep.
Speaking of achieving such mind-bending pictures, Hercules says a truly remarkable levitation image possesses three essential elements: sharpness, refinement, and composition. "Sharp because the object needs to look still. Otherwise, blur adds motion to the stillness, taking away from the momentum that makes levitation so special. Refined, because the subject needs to have grace."
Whether it's a person in mid-jump or an object suspended in mid-air, flawless execution is key to conveying the illusion of weightlessness. A tense, awkward posture betrays the act as a mere jump, while an out-of-place object disrupts the elegant levitation narrative, appearing more haphazard than ethereal.
I Have Built Tensegrity Table
This Dog
Flying Cruise Ship
Confusing Gravity
Damn That’s A Cool UFO
Confusing Perspective
These Swimmers Sitting
Floating Bin
Took me a second but there's a wet spot in front of the trash can lol
Marble Floor Of The Florence Cathedral
Hmmm
Falling Off Sand Dunes
This Tree
Yes, I Feel Comfy Here
I Genuinely Thought My Car Was Hovering Over The Parking
Camera Malfunction
My Cats Like To Sleep In Very Odd Positions
Stop
Confusing Gravity
Hiking Spot
were going on a trip in our favorite rocket ship, ✨️ g O I n G T H R o U G h T H E s k Y ✨️
Mach Loop is in Wales. The fence in the picture looks very much like the one in the video on the homepage: https://machloop.co.uk/ Cumbria gets a lot of low flying jets as well, but is more drystone walls.
Load More Replies...McDonnell Douglas F-15C-42-MC Eagle of the 48th Operations Group stationed at RAF Lakenheath, England.
Confusing Gravity
The Wreck Of Costa Concordia With Tilted Lens
Beach Levitation
This is a strange shadow... Oh, it took me this long to understand it's not a shadow at all
Perfect Angle
Visual Confusion Look Two Times
Trouble is that there are only 2 or 3 types, so it gets a tad repetitive.
Loved these but could not get through them all. Meniere's disease sucks.
Trouble is that there are only 2 or 3 types, so it gets a tad repetitive.
Loved these but could not get through them all. Meniere's disease sucks.