When I was inside the Wat Phra Kaew in Bangkok, it wasn’t the heat that disuaded me from taking pictures; it was the sheer number of tourists in the temple.
Coming in early, as soon as the temple opened, apparently was EVERYBODY’S idea to avoid the large crowd, which ironically, resulted in palace and temple grounds swarming with noisy tourists.
As majestic as the palace and the temples are, you’re forced to focus your camera upwards, as to avoid having unwanted people in your shots.
Snapmania seem to find a solution to this problem, as reported by OregonLive.com:
You’ve traveled 5,000 miles to London. You want a simple photo of the fountains of Trafalgar Square. But dash it all, other tourists keep walking in front of your camera.
Don’t despair. Use the Tourist Remover.
This free, new tool offered by Snapmania (www.snapmania.com) eliminates unwanted people, cars and other moving disruptions from photos.
Nifty, eh? I haven’t tried the service yet myself — you have to have three or more shots of the particular place/structure with varying placements of pesky tourists. This service is a definite must-try once I get a new camera.
This post was last modified on Sunday, 13 May 2007 06:40
With the removal of travel restrictions in Japan, the Japanese government has introduced the Visit…
Heading to Japan soon? Load up your Gcash because you can now use your Gcash…
With Japan slowly reopening to foreign tourists, Don Quijote has introduced a new discount coupon. …
I have been stuck in Manila since the whole country has been put under community…
It's been more than a year since this pandemic started. I can't say it's been…
It seems just like yesterday that I wrote about the blog turning 11 years. Here…