By using this site, you agree to our Privacy Policy and our Terms of Use. Close
HappySqurriel said:

If you notice, most of these images take place in television studios where people are often lit from several different directions to eliminate shadows; and this can result in multiple specular highlights (shiny white spots) being put onto glossy objects (like a person's eyes). Depending on the position of the camera, the lights, and the person being shot it is entirely possible to create specular highlights that would give a person's eyes the appearance of being slit eyes; especially if you were recording a low quality image.

Logic? 

You heathen!



Current PC Build

CPU - i7 8700K 3.7 GHz (4.7 GHz turbo) 6 cores OC'd to 5.2 GHz with Watercooling (Hydro Series H110i) | MB - Gigabyte Z370 HD3P ATX | Gigabyte GTX 1080ti Gaming OC BLACK 11G (1657 MHz Boost Core / 11010 MHz Memory) | RAM - Corsair DIMM 32GB DDR4, 2400 MHz | PSU - Corsair CX650M (80+ Bronze) 650W | Audio - Asus Essence STX II 7.1 | Monitor - Samsung U28E590D 4K UHD, Freesync, 1 ms, 60 Hz, 28"