I've decided to make one more attempt to recreate the Calvine photo, incorporating what I've learned from my previous experiments.
I bought an old, UK-produced 7 cm Dinky Toys Hawker Hunter to use as a prop for the jet. (I know it's often interpreted as a Harrier, but I simply think a Hunter is a better match — and the Dinky Toys Hunter was easily accessible to a hoaxer back in 1990. That said, it doesn't really matter, since same-scale Harriers were available as well.)
I'm currently working on my "UFO" prop. As soon as it's ready, I plan to create six photos showing a stationary "UFO" being intercepted by a jet. I'll try to match what we see in the Calvine photo as closely as possible.
Until then, I couldn't resist taking an improvised photo of the small jet to see what it would look like against a cloudy sky. (We get plenty of gray skies here in Sweden!) I used a 50 mm lens. When placing the jet 3.6 meters from the camera, it appears roughly the same size as the "jet" in the Calvine photo. This aligns well with Robinson's analysis, where he concludes that the fence is about 10.6 meters away, assuming a 50 mm lens. Using the same calculations, a 7 cm jet prop should indeed be placed roughly 3.6 meters from the camera to appear as it does in the Calvine image.
I haven't experimented with focus yet, and since I took my photo in the middle of the day, the result is much too sharp. But what's interesting is how we tend to interpret a small object shot against a distant sky as something large and far away.
The jet in my photo is suspended from a fishing line attached to the upper hinge of the garage door in the foreground. Also, my neighbor's house (40 meters away) and the forest (140 meters away) aren't extremely blurred but fairly sharp, even though the focus is set close to the jet.
I bought an old, UK-produced 7 cm Dinky Toys Hawker Hunter to use as a prop for the jet. (I know it's often interpreted as a Harrier, but I simply think a Hunter is a better match — and the Dinky Toys Hunter was easily accessible to a hoaxer back in 1990. That said, it doesn't really matter, since same-scale Harriers were available as well.)
I'm currently working on my "UFO" prop. As soon as it's ready, I plan to create six photos showing a stationary "UFO" being intercepted by a jet. I'll try to match what we see in the Calvine photo as closely as possible.
Until then, I couldn't resist taking an improvised photo of the small jet to see what it would look like against a cloudy sky. (We get plenty of gray skies here in Sweden!) I used a 50 mm lens. When placing the jet 3.6 meters from the camera, it appears roughly the same size as the "jet" in the Calvine photo. This aligns well with Robinson's analysis, where he concludes that the fence is about 10.6 meters away, assuming a 50 mm lens. Using the same calculations, a 7 cm jet prop should indeed be placed roughly 3.6 meters from the camera to appear as it does in the Calvine image.
I haven't experimented with focus yet, and since I took my photo in the middle of the day, the result is much too sharp. But what's interesting is how we tend to interpret a small object shot against a distant sky as something large and far away.
The jet in my photo is suspended from a fishing line attached to the upper hinge of the garage door in the foreground. Also, my neighbor's house (40 meters away) and the forest (140 meters away) aren't extremely blurred but fairly sharp, even though the focus is set close to the jet.