View allAll Photos Tagged tilt_shift
The bay of Portree is really picturesque, and with the boats made for a great setting to test out the tilt shift functionality of the camera
See here for more information about the photo:
www.orangeblob.com/blog/2008/12/tilt-shift-altitude/
Canon EOS-1D Mark III
1/4000 sec at f/2.8
ISO 200
45mm (Tilt shift)
I have to tell ya, this was an absolute biz-natch to correct in photoshop (try shooting a wall as tall as that from close up at 17mm) but I think it worked out OK in the end. More from this utterly delightful Spokane wedding here.
LaGrange, GA is a railroad town located between Atlanta and Montgomery, AL. Rail traffic is so regular that I didn't have to stand on the bridge very long waiting for this train. I used www.tiltshiftmaker.com to get the tilt shift effect. Week 36 of 52 of 2012. The theme is TILT SHIFT.
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- This is Griffin Park, home to the Brentford Football Club, seen from air. This stadium is known for being the only English league football ground to have a pub on each corner apparently.
I don't know how it has come out... but yeah I tried faking the Tilt-Shift Miniature Effect in Photoshop
For a change, I thought I'd try my hand at tilt-shift. Alas, this is my very first image using this technique.
There was a small population of village down below .. how could I refrain myself from a TS :)
Shot of the step farming taken from Neelkanth.
I was asked in my last post if I had used a tilt-shift lens for effect. The answer was no, as you can't get a Hasselblad tilt-shift for less than $5,000 (and I don't have that kind of money). However, the question spurred me to remember that last year I actually constructed my own tilt-shift for my Hasselblad. It was made using the plunger cam technique, for probably less than $10.
I only put one roll through it, and this image is one of two that were good enough to keep. The problem with a Hasselblad tilt-shift is that there's no way to control aperture or focus. The aperture is the easier part, because it results from the lens you use for the tilt-shift apparatus, so you have some choice over that. But the shutter speed is basically the speed at which you can press the shutter release. My fingers are not very fast, so I'm guessing I wasn't getting anything faster than 1/15 of a second or so. And I can't seem to get much faster with a cable release. This makes for very overexposed images, especially on bright days. Still, I think the idea has merit, and I wouldn't mind giving it another go.
This, of course, is the beautiful St. John's Bridge.
Tried fake tilt shift for the first time today--pretty fun. I realized I don't take many wide shots though so I'll have to start looking for those. And I wish that guy's head was not in the way.
While looking down from the Eiffel Tower; I just knew that i would HAVE to do a bunch of Tilt-shift-fakes!
Wikipedia:
Tilt-shift miniature faking is a process in which a photograph of a life-size location or object is manipulated so that it looks like a photograph of a miniature scale model. By distorting the focus of the photo, the artist simulates the shallow depth of field normally encountered with macro lenses making the scene seem much smaller than it actually is. Many miniature faked photographs are taken from a high angle to further simulate the effect of looking down on a miniature. Objects oriented horizontally, such as the train in the first example, make better subjects for tilt-shift miniature faking than vertically oriented objects.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tilt-shift_miniature_faking
The pont de Bir-Hakeim, formerly the pont de Passy, is a bridge that crosses the Seine River in Paris, France. It connects the city's 15th and 16th arrondissements, and passes through the île des Cygnes.
The bridge, made of steel, is the second to have stood at the site. It was constructed between 1903 and 1905, replacing an earlier bridge that had been erected in 1878. An arch bridge, it is 237 meters (777 ft) long and 24.7 meters (81 ft) wide.
The bridge has two levels: one for motor vehicles and pedestrians, and a viaduct above, through which passes Line 6 of the Paris Métro. The railway viaduct is supported by metal colonnades, except where it passes over the île des Cygnes, where it rests on a masonry arch. Many commemorative plates decorate the viaduct bridge, including several dedicated to soldiers fallen in Belgium during the Second World War.
In addition, the central arch of the viaduct, at the level of the island, is decorated with four monumental stone statues in high-relief: figures of Science and Labor by Jules-Felix Coutan, and Electricity and Commerce by Jean Antoine Injalbert.
Originally named the pont de Passy (after the former commune of Passy, which it reaches), it was renamed in 1948 to commemorate the Battle of Bir Hakeim, fought by Free French forces against the Nazi Afrika Korps in 1942
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pont_de_Bir-Hakeim
Paris Métro Line 6:
Paris Métro Line 6 is one of 16 Paris metro lines. Line 6 forms the southern part of a circular metro route (with line 2 forming the northern half). It is the sixth busiest line on the network. The line is built on an elevated viaduct for more than half of its length.
The view from Seat Knott on the western edge of the Howgill Fells overlooking the Lune Valley and the hamlet of Howgill. You may want to read my blog post about why my images like this may or may not improve in future.
Still messing with some tilting & shifting :).
Hope you all have a great week.
Thanks for your visit.
Had the opportunity to shoot with my best friend's Canon TS-E 45mm f/2.8 lens.
More photos on the blog!
Tilt shift effect given to a shot to transform this capture into Lilliput, destination of Gullivers travels.
My first attempt at the faux tilt-shift effect.
For those unfamiliar with tilt-shift, it's meant to make the photo look like a model and not the real thing.
Do these people look like toys or do they look real? Feedback is appreciated.
I took my T/S lens to the observation floor of the Hancock building in Chicago..it makes for some interesting images.
TIlt-shift experiments with a homemade tilt-shift lens (Helios 44 with what looks like bicycle tube to let it flex)
Premier véritable essai de rendu "tilt shift" avec une vue de la périphérie de Montmélian.
My first real tilt-shit try, with a view of the city of Montmelian.
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Day 3, Sunday 5th July 2009 - 900 Taylor Street, San Francisco:
Those damn hills!
From a selection of photos of our trip around the world, posted chronologically (camera clocks were not altered so there maybe a discrepancy between exposure data and stated dates).
This was taken from the top of the Eiffel Tower in Paris. The vignette effect was caused by the pitch's spotlights. The shallow DOF is (unsurprisingly) fake.
TIlt-shift experiments with a homemade tilt-shift lens (Helios 44 with what looks like bicycle tube to let it flex)
Taken from Normandy Hill road bridge (Plymouth UK) that crosses the Tamar Valley Branch Line on a Canon 5DMk2 with Hasselblad fit Carl Zeiss 80mm CB Planar on Mirex Tilt/Shift. f2.8 with 10 degrees upward tilt.
Image cropped from original, bright areas of foliage subdued, saturation increased and a slight rotation of image (2 degrees).