View allAll Photos Tagged Shifted
This was my first try at a faux tilt shift effect using photoshop. Most of my photography doesn't lend itself to this technique, but I thought this photo would work fairly well and I'm pretty happy with the results.
See more tilt-shift fakes here: www.flickr.com/groups/59319377@N00/
I really hope that I'll get some comments from some of the fake tilt-shift experts about how to refine my technique!
Probando el efecto tilt-shift con una foto de la Gran Via de Madrid...
Aqui la foto original:
img823.imageshack.us/img823/6846/img12272.jpg
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Visit my gallery in 500px
Michael Shifter, President of the Inter-American Dialogue, moderated the conversation.
Event Agenda: www.thedialogue.org/events/a-conversation-with-luis-ferna...
Event summary: www.thedialogue.org/analysis/a-conversation-with-luis-fer...
and here is my 1st real tilt-shift pic, worked a treat if i don't mind saying so myself!!! even the grey stone inbetween the snow on the right looks like something has been sprinkled onto a model to give a 'rubble' effect! lovin' it !!!
In June we drove down to the French Riviera to see one of our kids who works there, and on the way back, we visited some wonderful Romanesque churches.
This was not really a seriously planned and prepared trip, and therefore most of the churches were closed and could only be photographed from the outside.
Likewise, I had to forfeit the Thoronet abbey because they do not allow tripods unless one has obtained a special clearance in advance, which I hadn’t. It was nevertheless very enjoyable and, as always, “We shall have to come back!”
The Saint-Donat chapel not very far from the village of Montfort is a splendid example of the “first Romanesque art”. The church is supposed to be part of a hermitage where saint Donat had lived until his death in 535. It is a large church that was built around Year 1000. Very rustic, simple and unadorned, it is one of the best preserved in the whole of Provence.
The façade is equally impressive with its beautiful double window and the ample arch that once marked the entrance.
Having no room to step back (the slope goes down quite sharply just behind where my tripod was standing), I had to stitch two exposures taken with the 19mm tilt-shift lens. That is why the EXIF are incomplete, as they somehow get stripped off when stitching the exposures in PTGui.
A pair of doves made a nest on my sister & brother in laws 9th floor balcony. They take turns sitting with the young hatchlings.
After being grounded on the ocean floor for well over four decades, the largest iceberg in the world is on the loose.
The iceberg, known as A23a, calved from the Filchner-Ronne ice shelf in West Antarctica in 1986, but quickly ran aground. By 2020, it had lost its grip on seafloor and began drifting in the Weddell Sea. Scientists say that it is not unusual for icebergs to become grounded, but over time they shrink enough to unground and float. Now, however, driven by winds and currents, A23a has put a spurt on and is heading quickly away from Antarctic waters.
The image uses images from Copernicus Sentinel-1 to show how the iceberg rotated and travelled between 2 November 2023 (blue) and 26 November 2023 (red).
Like most icebergs from the Weddell sector, A23a is likely to end up in the South Atlantic on a path called iceberg alley.
Covering around 4000 sq km, more than four times the size of New York city, and around 400 m thick, A23a is currently the world’s biggest iceberg.
An animation also shows the iceberg’s changing position during November.
Credits: contains modified Copernicus Sentinel data (2023), processed by ESA, CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO
This is the second photograph I've posted from my trip to Loch Ard at the start of May.
The sun was quite high by the time I took this (7.10am) and it was breaking through the clouds onto Loch Ard, the light on the water changing constantly changing as the sky shifts.
Got some great shots over London on approach to landing at Heathrow. I tried a tilt-shift filter on this one...
A b&w detail of the painting Shift which is part of the exhibition The Poetry of Content: Five Contemporary Artists . I'm heading to Syracuse for the reception tomorrow evening.
Here is a fine review of the exhibition:
www.ithaca.com/entertainment/those-lofty-heights-five-con...
Went down to Melbourne for a few days to see some friends and ended up spending two nights in Nagambie with some friends of friends...best way to do it. For these photos, I pretty much rolled out of bed and was at the lake...this is the view from their property.
Just testing out the tilt-shift effect in Photoshop. I took this from the top of an old castle (forgot the name) in Marrakech, Morocco.
I’m not entirely happy with this, but I’m getting ready to leave on vacation Sunday morning, so I’m out of time. I used my in camera miniature effect to get this. I also tried the tiltshiftmaker Ron supplied the link to, but I like this version a little bit better.
52 Weeks in 2015 - Week 29 - Theme: Tilt-Shift - Category: Conceptual
This is from the top of the highest dune in The Great Sand Dunes National park in Colorado. This spot is usually crowded and full of foot prints but with 30 to 40 mph winds it wasn't too crowded....I liked the drama of the blowing sand.
On Explore Mar 22, 2011 #348....Thanks!
gratitude day 3. We went to Columbus to see the exhibit "shifting perspectives" It was a wonderful experience :)
Happy Thursday xo
Shifting focus between a couple of nearby chimneys and the equestrian Statue of Jan Žižka a few blocks away.
Prague-Karlín, Czech Republic
A part of the Views From My Windows (Vol. 2) album
One piece in my collection of hourglasses. This one flows for 30 minutes, so I guess it's a half-hourglass, lol.