This reminds me of a story I recall from anthropology which may have been
apocryphal but was part of the curriculum. There was a tribe that lived in
round houses with round tools and round wives etc. When asked to compare an
acute angle to a obtuse angle, they were unable to do so and thought that all
angles from 45 to 130 degrees looked the same to them. People who live in
square houses and take square photos were able to distinguish between an 89.5
vs. 90 degree angle. They called it the "carpentered world hypothesis." I
think you are right and the same thing is happening or has happened to your
eyes. You get used to looking at things in a certain way. There is no right
or wrong, just different.
I note that the keystoning effect at the Sheffield church was quite miminal
because the center of the lens was't too high above eye level. The subtle
keystoning effect works well. Architects, view camera and shift lens owners
may disagree.
By the way, both photos are great. I never could get very good lighting with
church photos and you've both done a remarkable job.
Warren
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