Username_Hidden said:
It was a tag I made some time ago, but I named it following Danbooru nomenclature (long hair -> very long hair -> absurdly long hair), without knowing that the actual name for it is "Extreme wide shot".
I originally wanted it to be for very wide shots where the character(s) almost look like a dot compared to the scenery, and I'm against straight up nuking it.
(I would also like to propose to rename it to extreme wide shot)
I won't go and nuke it myself, as you and magcolo have brought valid points in defense. I think we need to change wikis and do some gardening if we're going to keep it, though. I would definitely support renaming to extreme wide shot.
It sort of is, actually. I wanted to say that terminology is objective but it seems that even photographers can't agree on it.
There's this guide which has various examples, but lacks very wide shot. This other guide has very wide shot, but calls wide shot something different. (For reference, I believe our equivalent of Full Shot is full body).
I'm not too well-versed into this subject, so if anyone knows better do tell.
I'm not too well-versed myself, but from the little experience I have, my impression is that once the shot is wider than is needed to show the subject's full body, it's a matter of intent with how much the location is emphasized vs the character(s) at least as much as it's defined by the mathematical proportion of the frame taken up. For example, switching between wide angle and telephoto lenses in conjunction with moving the camera can change the amount of background in view and its perceived distance from the subject without changing the visual arc that the subject takes up.
Looking around online, the film use of "wide shot" looks more like our full body, and doesn't match our current wiki for wide shot.
post #6225112 and post #6240996 are probably wide shots by the photography definition but I'm not sure if they should count for ours. (Opinions on that?)
post #6237047 has the character shown at a similar scale to those two but I don't think it'd be a wide shot by any definition, even if it included the feet, because the background is so out-of-focus. With a camera, that image probably would have been produced by a telephoto lens, giving a sense of closeness to the subject and making the background look farther away. Art makes it more difficult because you could compose a shot like that but then draw the background in perfect focus.
post #6230498 shows full body and a significant amount of background but the background is clearly de-emphasized in favor of the subject so I don't think that's a wide shot either.
post #6240381 might be considered a very wide shot by the photography definition. Somehow it feels a bit strange for me to call that "very" but perhaps that's just me. I think it should be at least wide shot and I'd be alright with very but not extreme.
For extreme, you should not be able to make out any details on the character(s) present, except maybe in special absurdres cases.
Differentiating between wide and very wide I'm not as sure about. I guess we could say a wide shot shows meaningful background but still emphasizes the character, while a very wide shot emphasizes the background over the character while still showing the character clearly? That could get pretty subjective and bring us back to square one, though.
Browsing very_wide_shot, many if not most of its posts would probably be "extreme" by the photo/video definition.
We technically already do. From the wide shot wiki:
As a rule of thumb, the character should be noticeable from the thumbnail but shouldn't take up more than 25% of the overall image.
I'm not sure if this is already too far away, plus there are artworks like post #6242385 which are tagged as wide shot.
I propose something like 33% to 25-20% for wide shot, 25-20% to 10-5% for very wide shot, and anything smaller extreme wide shot.
Even though I said it before, thinking more I don't think percentage-based rules would be very meaningful. I like the thumbnail-based rules of thumb that the existing wikis have, though I think the current wiki for "very" applies better to "extreme" if we are going to have both.