A woman was filmed trying on a wedding dress in front of two mirrors using an iPhone 12. When she looked back, she saw herself in three poses in one photo. She was shocked. How can this be? A month later, the mystery was finally solved.
The photo has spread on social media in recent weeks. You see comedian Tessa Coates standing in front of a mirror. But although you can see from behind that her left arm is dangling next to the body, in the mirror image she is holding both hands together.
Coates puts the photo on it Instagram stories. “I swear on my life,” she wrote. “This picture is real, not photoshop. It’s not a joke. I saw it and I almost threw up.”
In a number of photos and videos, she initially jokes that the dress might be cursed, but then investigates. Even the Apple Store doesn’t understand that.
An employee suspects that the iPhone incorrectly processed Live Photo. Using the Live Photo function, your iPhone takes a series of photos one by one and selects the best one. It is possible that one photo was not chosen, but rather was composited incorrectly, making it appear as if the woman was in three positions.
“Just a panoramic photo”
The answer: redemption comes from Him YouTube channel for iPhone. The presenter, Faruk Korkmaz, looks at the basic information of the image and sees that the resolution is different from a regular image. The image resolution is 3028 x 3948 pixels. This happens when you take a photo in panoramic mode.
The Panorama feature is a separate mode within the iPhone camera app that allows you to capture wide environments by moving your iPhone from left to right. As you move, the camera takes photos in quick succession and then stitches them together to create a wider image.
If the woman drops her arms first and brings her hands together while taking the panoramic photo, this may explain why she appears in three poses. There are all kinds of videos on TikTok and Instagram showing how to manipulate images this way.
The image was not wide enough for the corresponding icon
The store employee who Coates gave him his iPhone may have accidentally set the camera to panorama mode. She probably moved a little and the woman moved her arms at that moment.
“It is possible that Apple employees did not see this in the information because it does not contain a panoramic icon,” Korkmaz said. “But that doesn’t happen if the result of the image is not wide enough. That’s all. It’s a panoramic image. We don’t have to waste any more words on it.”