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Green Dream

"Brenizer Method"

 

Panoramique de 10 images

Originale en 15308 x 10858 pixels

Flou arrière naturel, dû à la focale 135f2

Ce n'est pas du tilt shift / No tilt shift

 

“The Brenizer Method”. For those who may or may not have heard of it and are not sure of what this technique is exactly, it’s essentially using a telephoto lens to create a very shallow depth of field as if shot with a wider angle lens. This technique makes a dSLR image look like it was shot by medium format.

Essentially it is the same concept used by landscape photographers known as panorama stitching except instead of stitching a bunch of horizontal shots together to form a wide image, the images are horizontally and vertically stitched to create a wide and tall image not unlike a square. And because you are stitching together many files, you are creating a very high resolution image that can hold up to very large print sizes without loss in quality. By shooting at a very shallow depth-of-field (DOF) and then stitching the shots together, you’re exaggerating the shallow DOF.

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Uploaded on August 30, 2011
Taken on July 27, 2011