View allAll Photos Tagged tilt_shift
Tilt-shift Miniature Fake, Bangkok, Thailand
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I re-edited miniature fake photos; because, after uploading the last set, I thought they looked too high contrast and too much vivid color. I need more light and soft retouch... Anyway, still under process of trial and error.
Been playing with Pseudo-Tilt-Shift lens photography.. actually there's no tilt here since you need a real tilt shift lens to do that.
Pseudo and not Fake because instead of doing perspective correction in photoshop i used a ultrawide angle lens (12mm) and extracted a 24mm equivalent crop out of it. Luckily the 5d2 resolution is enough to end up with an image which is roughly 8 Mpixels in size...
This process is actually what happens optically on shift lenses, the difference is you retain your full pixel count and you can actually see the result while framing instead of having to picture it in your head and crop it afterward.. I guess there's a reason why you pay those lenses an eye and a half...
More info here in this discussion
epfl, lausanne
Tilt-shift effect on this image taken from the Old Fort overlooking Corfu Town, Greece.
I took this photo with this exact effect in mind. It just seemed to fit perfectly.
© Manfred Schmidt Photography | All rights reserved.
Do not use, copy or edit any of my images without my written permission.
simple hand held shot with fake tilt shift processing applied. its my first attempt at this style and is something i am really looking to explore as i love the results. I know its not the best shot for tilt shift but it still works for me.
thanks for looking
cologne - 25.01.2013
I cannot really explain what had driven me to play around with masking, filters and blurring. Maybe I saw an example somewhere. Maybe I remembered a dialog with a friend a few days ago, about my only Tilt-Shift picture I ever made of Schönbrunn Palace in Vienna. Whatever, today I went to the LVR Tower after work, bought a ticket for the lift, closed my jacket and went up the platform. I can tell you, it was fucking cold up there! Everybody in Cologne knows about the political issue regarding the LVR Tower and the cathedral. You must know that Cologne is very Catholic, and when they planed the tower, they had a conflict with the church, but also with UNESCO about the status of the cathedral as a world cultural heritage. I think that’s the reason why Cologne looks like a giant village, even after 2000 years. Thanks my dear cathedral!
Previously i dont know about Tilt-Shift, thanks @Ashumittal and @toomanytribbles.
Anyone can give tiltshift effect to their pics by - tiltshiftmaker.com/photo-processing.php
This tutorial can be also very helpful - www.tiltshiftphotography.net/photoshop-tutorial.php
Title is taken from @Ashumittal's www.flickr.com/photos/ashumittal/3509906866/
Playing around with the Tilt Shift effect on my new G12.
My photoblog: takingpictures101.blogspot.com
Thanks for watching.
Gerry :)
Mar Del Plata, Argentina
Faux Tilt-Shift processing applied to a somewhat uninteresting photo taken with a point a shoot whilst on holidays in Argentina a few years back. I have wanted to try some faux tilt-shift for a while but don't have any modern shots that really suit. I then stumbled across this one for a first attempt.
I used Gimp for the processing and some online tutorials for help although there really isn't much to it.
Fujifilm X-Pro1 with Tokina 17mm f/3.5 RMC lens, set to f/8. Three images shot with -10 mm, 0 mm and +10 mm horizontal shift respectively, merged in Photoshop. Some low image quality areas left and right cropped (10 mm shift is beyond the full-frame image circle, but you can decide late depending on tha actual image) as well as some uninteresting foreground area.
A ideia do efeito é conseguir simular uma fotografia a uma miniatura
The main idea for this effect it´s to give the impression of a miniature model
Experimenting with tilt shift based on this tutorial:
www.tiltshiftphotography.net/photoshop-tutorial.php
I'm pleased with the outcome and need to find some greater heights