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Artist transforms travel photos with paper cutouts

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Rich McCor's clever takes on familiar world monuments have earned worldwide attention. Photos like this one of the Arc de Triomphe in Paris made him an overnight Instagram sensation.

Taking pictures of famous landmarks is like writing a thank-you letter or ironing a shirt.

You’re sorta obligated to do it, and everyone does it more or less the same way.

So when someone figures out a unique style of getting the job done, people notice.

That’s what happened when Londoner Rich McCor began adorning pictures of British landmarks with whimsical paper cutouts and posting the results online.

Originally, the 28-year-old creative agency worker intended the photos for the amusement of himself and friends.

Then he got a lesson on the impact of “viral” when Britain’s “Daily Mail” publicized some of his photos.

“I went from 5,000 followers on Instagram to about 60,000 in a week,” McCor tells CNN.

According to McCor, Lonely Planet contacted him and sponsored part of a trip around Europe to put his artistic touch on monuments in Paris, Stockholm, Copenhagen and other cities.

Idea was bolt of inspiration

The whole thing started with a cutout of a watchband artfully placed in front of London’s Big Ben clock tower. (See gallery above.)

“In London there are so many iconic landmarks,” McCor says. “As a photographer, I wanted to find a way to photograph London in a way it hadn’t been done before.”

Copenhagen's Little Mermaid is apparently no selfie-stick snob.

The inspiration for placing a cutout in front of the iconic clock came partly from some quick-stop animation work he’d done as a work project.

“A young girl and her father came round and asked to see the photo I’d just taken,” he says.

“They asked if I had more of these. I said no and they said you should do more.

“That encouraged me to see what other icons in London I could shoot.”

McCord uses cardstock and a scalpel-like knife to create his cutouts.

Some of the ideas come to him quickly. Others he ponders for a while.

Just don’t call him an artist

McCor isn’t in danger of being seduced by his insta-fame.

“The interest is exciting but I’m keeping my feet on the ground about the whole thing,” he says.

“I just stumbled upon this with Big Ben and the wristwatch thing and now people are calling me an artist, which feels so pretentious and phony.”

Even so, he hopes the popularity of his pictures might lead to bigger things.

“If I can, I’d like to make this into an opportunity to do more traveling,” he says.

“My ambition is to do something for the Olympics in 2016 [in Rio de Janeiro]. That’d be fantastic.”

You can follow Rich McCor and see more of his photos on Instagram.

[Source:- CNN]

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