View allAll Photos Tagged Shifted
This is my little sister in-front of our chicken coop petting Pierre.
I like B&W pictures much more than colored. When you take a colored photo, your capturing their surroundings and cloths. But in B&W the focus is shifted to the scene it's self........If that makes any sense.
Stay Safe, Eat Doughnuts (â•☞▰ᗜ▰)â•☞
Here's the final artwork for the CD sleeve. It will be a limited run of music performed by our church band. I changed the overall balance, added the "Shift" text and changed the "framed" image (which I shot yesterday). I like the final outcome, hopefully it will interest people.
Shifting light - The view from the Quiraing looking down the Trotternish Ridge with some intense fragments of light picking out the features of Cleat and Dun Dubh.
Early morning atmospheric conditions bringing out the best that Skye has to offer, with the welcome break in the clouds revealing that magical Skye light that makes this such a special landscape.
Isle of Skye, Scottish Inner Hebrides
Explore #1 21/07/2025
Experiment in tilt-shift effect on the picture of a car on fire in Brussels, for a blogpost at houbi.com/?p=623.
This was when bystanders and a police patrol that was in the neighbourhood tried to put out the fire. They only had a little bit of success when they pulled out the firehose from my office building onto the street. But the fire kept coming back. Then the firemen arrived.
The orginal picture (made with an Iphone btw) is this one.
The steps are as in this tutorial.
Being free to work in a simple shift dress is a wonderful treat! Most of all when it's such a beautiful fit.
20 de marzo 2009, Pingan, China
¿He conseguido el efecto o no? Decidme!!
Does it seem a tilt-shift???
This morning when I walked into the living room a beam of light was shining on my painting Shift in an otherwise dimly lit space. A lovely moment as I finish a new painting of Temma's hand for the group exhibition opening this Friday from 5 to 8 pm Hofheimer Gallery in Chicago. Hope to see you there!
Holtingerveld near Uffelte, Drenthe, The Netherlands.
LAOWA D-Dreamer 12mm F2.8 with shift converter (17mm f/4) at f/8
These Northern Flickers at Huntley Meadows Park are probably the most photographed birds in the park. Over the past few weeks many of us have observed the cavity being excavated, and now we try to photograph them going in and out. There wasn't enough light this morning to support the shutter speed needed to really nail the flight, but I like the blur on this one anyway.
Here's one from sunrise last week in Malibu, CA. Looking forward to getting on the road and heading up to the Sierras sometime in October. Not that I don't love shooting at the sea but I'm ready for some new scenery. Thanks for taking a look.
Pine forests surround a shifting sand dune on the northwest side of Gotska Sandön in the Baltic Sea, Sweden.
Nexus: a performance by Body Shift as part of the Austin Dance Festival on April 1, 2017, in downtown Austin. Body Shift is a mixed-ability dance project that offers classes, workshops and performances in creating ways for people of all abilities to dance together.
Back in January I went out with family to get a family picture. It turned out to be a horrible day for portraits; cold, windy, too bright. As we waited at one of the sites to take more bad pictures, I shot this as a storm rolled in; it has set in a folder of rejected family pictures for 7 months but it has been revived as I found it in a search for something else.
I just kept aiming my little $10 .1 megapixel Shift 3 mini digital camera at the thunderstorm until I got something. Only twice did the delayed reaction of the shutter on the toy camera fire at the same time as the lightning struck, but this was the best of the two times it did. I was standing in the relative comfort of my covered front porch and holding my hand with camera attached out from under the edge of the roof into the rain and aiming in an upwardly direction. I remember this streak - it was a lot longer, but I just caught part of it.
Adelaide Crescent, Brighton. By the famous London architect Decimus Burton, 1830-1850. Best large on black.
near Tofte, Minnesota. We could hear the ice that was piling up near shore rumbling as it broke apart. This very cold winter has frozen over most of Lake Superior. To give some perspective, I would guess the distance between the two lower legs of the crack to be about thirty feet.
a security guard is waiting for finishing his duty in Agra fort..
white balance was in tungsten by mistake.. later on i liked it this way. :)
GBRf 73965 'Des O'Brien' & 73961 'Alison' working a slightly delayed 1Z43 From Derby R.T.C - Crewe. Ready for a night shift of runs around Cheshire and Merseyside/
"People ask me what I do in winter when there's no baseball. I'll tell you what I do. I stare out the window and wait for spring.
Rogers Hornsby
A tilt-shift "Collabo" with the partner in crime in honor of opening week of Baseball season. I was hoping to create the illusion of a replica Fenway Park in the old toy/model format.
Best viewed large
Featured on Bostonist.com as the Photo of the Day for March 26, 2007
This was a difficult shot to get right as I couldn't view the composition before taking the shot. Then after viewing the image on the LCD, I would have to recompose and refocus. This would've been so much easier if it wasn't a self portrait! This is certainly a shot I would like to try again in the future. I need to find a way to hide the camera in the reflection.
Strobist: 580EXII sitting on the passenger seat, E-TTL, triggered by ST-E2.
My first tilt-shift! Please be kind! :)
It's a shot of Granada center from Alhambra.
Granada, Spain.
"Tilt-shift photography" refers to the use of camera movements on small- and medium-format cameras, and sometimes specifically refers to the use of tilt for selective focus, often for simulating a miniature scene. Sometimes the term is used when the shallow depth of field is simulated with digital postprocessing; the name may derive from the tilt-shift lens normally required when the effect is produced optically. (Wikipedia)