Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - A photo is a photo. I am a photo. What you are looking for has nothing to do with me. What do you mean?

A photo is a photo. I am a photo. What you are looking for has nothing to do with me. What do you mean?

With the development of photographic equipment and beauty technology, people can take high-quality photos more and more easily, and get the best results through post-processing. So many friends call photos a photo liar. Today we will learn what a photo is. I have something to look for, but it has nothing to do with me.

The photo is my photo. This is a half-joking statement that I have nothing to do with finding photos. It is usually used by women, which shows that the gap between the person in the photo and the real me is quite obvious. If you know me through photos, but you don't know that I am a real person, then you should look at the photos and don't tell me how to treat the real me. The reason for this phenomenon, on the one hand, is that makeup, beauty, filters and special effects are indeed exaggerated, which can almost turn the person in the photo into another person. On the other hand, people pay more and more attention to external conditions, but ignore the concern and demand for spirit. Both men and women are more interested in good skin appearance, and want to express their imaginary self through photos to achieve spiritual satisfaction. But many people think this is not good, and people have to face their true selves. When these two concepts collide with each other, a photo is produced, and neither the photo nor what I am looking for has anything to do with me.

In short, photos are photos. I am looking for something. A photo has nothing to do with me. It means that real people are different from photos.