Behind-the-Scenes Feature: Crazy Columns: Building an impossible structure for Optical Tricks |
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When I was young, I was fascinated with this illusion. I would draw it in many variations. For Optical Tricks I decided to attempt it photographically. I began by reflecting paper towel tubes into a sheet of glass, aligning the reflections with square cardboard pillars behind the glass.
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My experiment with glass and cardboard helped me determine the exact size of the model. A square arch and three round columns were made of wood and covered with a thin layer of spackling compound to create a stone-like surface.
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Water-based paints were used to enhance the stone texture of the model, background surfaces, and rubble. A sheet of glass with a slightly reflective coating divides the set. Careful lighting hides some parts of the model and highlights others, resulting in the illusion of an impossible structure.
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The final scene as it appears in the book. The edges of the glass and the round columns on the left are clues to how the illusion works.
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Crazy Columns, ©Walter Wick, 1998
from Optical Tricks |