View allAll Photos Tagged tilt_shift
This is an attempt at creating a tilt-shift illusion with one of my own pictures. This was taken from a Cruise ship as it sailed from Boston Harbor.
This is a testing edit for achieving tilt-shift photography effect (original photo is next page). I used 'Tilt-shift Blur' and 'Aperture Blur' to get the effect.
For my final folio, I want to do 'Exploring the urban landscape' topic. I want to shot the city and edit to tilt-shift photography.
A tilt shift photo I put together without using a tilt-shift lens.
A shot of downtown New Orleans on Bourbon Street in late July.
Fake tilt shift in photoshop for something a bit different.
Images are copyright Airbus and Richard Harley. Not to be reproduced in any way.
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Fotos e tratamento digital:Leto Carvalho
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Uso INDEVIDO de imagem é CRIME previsto no código penal - Art. 154-B.
Se houver algum interesse de uso da imagem, favor entrar em contato.
Technique: Topaz Filter and standard tilt shift procedure (see on youtube)
Info
The open space which lies before the basilica was redesigned by Gian Lorenzo Bernini from 1656 to 1667, under the direction of Pope Alexander VII, as an appropriate forecourt, designed "so that the greatest number of people could see the Pope give his blessing, either from the middle of the façade of the church or from a window in the Vatican Palace" (Norwich 1975 p 175). Bernini had been working on the interior of St. Peter's for decades; now he gave order to the space with his renowned colonnades, using the Tuscan form of Doric, the simplest order in the classical vocabulary, not to compete with the palace-like façade by Carlo Maderno, but he employed it on an unprecedented colossal scale to suit the space and evoke emotions of awe.