View allAll Photos Tagged miniatureeffect
Playing around with my Perspective Control lens to make a miniature-effect look to this car in a gas station parking lot.
Nikkor PC 85mm f/2.8 Tilt/Shift @ f/4
It was the first time to shoot the ferry building in miniature effect. You may see how small of these people in front of the ferry building. ;) Something new to try and practice with the TS lens.
#sanfrancisco #ferrybuilding #luckysnapshot
At DUMBO we see Jane's Carousel and numerous tourists walking along the path, but they all look like tiny models thanks to the tilt effect of my "perspective control" lens.
Nikkor 85mm PC f/2.8 wide open
A tilt/shift sunset is seen over the harbor at King's Warf in Bermuda.
Nikon D800 @ PC Nikkor 85mm f/2.8, wide open
Some more stills from my new short film “The Mammoth in My Community,” made with a homemade pinhole lens. Click here to watch it: youtu.be/wwrYC_JFIgo
Camera: Sony A7S II
Lens: Homemade Pinhole Soda Can Lens
Reviewing the Lensbaby Trio 28 on the blog here. Cool lens with three different effect optics which can be rotated between and offer different level's of Lensbaby-ness. This shot was taken using the Sweet optic which places an in focus sweet spot, center frame with a gradual, radial defocusing vignette similar to the Sweet 35 or Sweet 50 optics.
Portmeirion - an italian village in Wales: the picturesque location of the TV series in the late sixties „The Prisoner“ (Nummer 6)
I'm back in London and last night I went to the Sky Garden on top of the what is known in London as the Walkie Talkie building (20 Fenchurch Street). I had to battle the light reflections on the windows but this shot didn't turn out too bad.
For those who may want to visit the Sky Garden you need to make a reservation online well in advance of the day you plan on going but if you go at 8pm they will let in without a reservation :-)
This "miniature" view of Prinz Eugen's Belvedere Palace was taken with the Pentax Q7 and the so-called "09 Mount Shield Lens". It is a tiny meniscus lens in a plastic mount the size of a 2 Euro coin and not much thicker. It weighs next to nothing. Focal length 11mm (equivalent to 53mm in "full format"), aperture fixed at f:9, focus fixed at 2 metres. You can leave it on the camere as a body-cap - hence the name "Mount Shield Lens".
Note the complete absence of tourists!
I love to walk around with a PENTAX Q and the so-called "Toy Lenses". These are tiny manual-focus primes with a fixed aperture. They were rather misunderstood and never caught on. I think that's a pity. If one takes the trouble, they can give beautiful results. They are NOT toys, and are anything but simple to use well. As with any equipment, you have to recognise the possibilities and respect the limitations.
Aerial view of Zojoji Temple as seen from Tokyo Tower
(Tilt shift effect added)
Tamron AF 55-200mm Di II LD Macro
Vista aérea del templo Zojoji desde la Tokyo Tower
(Efecto tilt shift)
Tamron AF 55-200mm Di II LD Macro
I found the "miniature" setting on my camera. So after bokeh ... it's miniature Paris ...
J'ai trouvé l'effet "miniature" sur mon appareil photo ... donc après le bokeh c'est le miniature !
In this picture I used the "tilt"function of a tilt-shift lens. This gives the miniature-effect! Look at the difference with the previous image. I stood at the same level.
My first tilt-shift image.
Thirty-Nine Jellybeans - 1 (of 39) - Canon PowerShot G12 with Polarizer - Photographer Russell McNeil PhD (Physics) lives on Vancouver Island, where he works as a writer.
The tilt capabilities of this Nikon prime lens produces a miniature effect. Thus, the roller coaster and its passengers appear to be a model.
Nikkor 85mm f/2.8 T/S PC