Re: Photo in New Yorker

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Emily,

I recall seeing little white hexagons in the eyes of portraits shown in an exhibit at the Houston Museum of Natural Sciences several years ago. I assumed that they were images of the photographer's umbrella flash setup, or the diaphragm in the camera lens -- essentially reflections from the surface of the eyeball. Every portrait had them. Is this a possible explanation?

Roger

I've been looking through New Yorkers the last few weeks, when I'm not trying to work, or when the computer is bugging me.

And I've come across a photo of Max Roach by Martin Schoeller, published in the June 5, 2000 New Yorker.

Now I know there's hardly any chance that more than four people on this list have kept their New Yorkers back that far, but if you're among them I'd appreciate if you'd take a look at that photograph, on page 91, and tell me what you think makes the little tiny white rings in the corneas of Roach's eyes.

thanks


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