1960s OceanEye Invention Allows Stunning Half-Submerged Photography

In the 1960s, National Geographic photographer Bates Littlehales invented a device that enabled wide-angle photography underwater. Called OceanEye, it’s a Plexiglas contraption with handles and controls that link to the camera inside of it. Here’s what it looks like:

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Today another National Geographic photographer, David Doubilet, uses OceanEye to capture shots that are half-in, half-out of the water. The stunning images are collected in Two Worlds: Above and Below the Sea, published by Phaidon.

Two Worlds: Above and Below the Sea comes out on November 3rd and is available for pre-order now.


Source: core77

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