The red circles are just reference points aye? (That is, there are other reference points on the photos that would be suitable to be circled similarly?)
Looks like a photo from the same set, taken in rapid series. Angle is just a tiny bit different. Maybe camera was in "burst" mode.
Having worked in graphics before, I think I see what happened here. They are both the same pic, BUT the lower one has been resized only in the vertical plain, but not the horizontal plane. I never allowed that to happen to photos when I was putting together presentations or publications, but I saw it happen enough from other people that it became immediately recognizable when I saw it.
So at first glance, yes it appears that they are two pics taken from different angles, but I'm pretty sure that the bottom one is the same exact picture, but scrunched vertically with the ratio not adjusted for the horizontal.
The red circles are just reference points aye? (That is, there are other reference points on the photos that would be suitable to be circled similarly?)
Looks like a photo from the same set, taken in rapid series. Angle is just a tiny bit different. Maybe camera was in "burst" mode.
Having worked in graphics before, I think I see what happened here. They are both the same pic, BUT the lower one has been resized only in the vertical plain, but not the horizontal plane. I never allowed that to happen to photos when I was putting together presentations or publications, but I saw it happen enough from other people that it became immediately recognizable when I saw it.
So at first glance, yes it appears that they are two pics taken from different angles, but I'm pretty sure that the bottom one is the same exact picture, but scrunched vertically with the ratio not adjusted for the horizontal.
I think it is exactly the same picture with some of the foreground removed.
I superimposed them in GIMP and made a GIF.
Thanks!
Nice. Extra credit.
If it's anything it's a crop of the bottom of the second photo. Likely to fit with a different media presentation format.