Closing in: This photograph of Times Square, New York, can give the viewer a strange sense of vertigo. (Randy Scott Slavin/Rex Features)
In stereographic projections, several panoramic images are projected onto a flat, square or rectangular image.
New York-based photographer Randy Scott Slavin uses a computer program to stitch together as many as one hundred photos of the same scene to create the bizarre images.
Mr. Slavin is inspired by artist M. C. Escher who was famous for his optical illusions.
Please click the photos for larger images:
Randy uses computer software to stitch together 100 photos to make the ‘stereographic projection’. (Randy Scott Slavin/Rex Features
Randy uses computer software to stitch together 100 photos to make the ‘stereographic projection’. (Randy Scott Slavin/Rex Features
Does this make you dizzy? A boardwalk in Brooklyn, New York, is transformed beyond recognition. (Randy Scott Slavin/Rex Features)
The sky and trees are reflected in a lake in Central Park, New York City. (Randy Scott Slavin/Rex Features)
Falling down the rabbit hole: Leafy Central Park in New York City is transformed into a wormhole. (Randy Scott Slavin/Rex Features)
The waves appear to be crashing onto the beach in ‘Tsunami’, shot in Puerto Rico. (Randy Scott Slavin/Rex Features)
Closing in: This photograph of Times Square, New York, can give the viewer a strange sense of vertigo. (Randy Scott Slavin/Rex Features)