View allAll Photos Tagged tilt_shift
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I've been playing around with the Tilt-Shift-Maker (tiltshiftmaker.com/) on some of my pictures. The tool is kind of nice, but the quaility of the tiltshift photos is not that good. This shot is out of my Ireland pictures. Irish countryside sundset near Graiguenamanagh.
original shot:
www.flickr.com/photos/fipsy/2940368643/
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© István Pénzes.
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20th., March 2010, first test shots with the Hasselblad Flexbody.
Hasselblad Flexbody
Carl Zeiss Macro Planar 4/120
Ilford Delta 100
Spur HRX-3
Coolscan 9000
when you're on a top floor of a Hawaiian resort, it's a no brainer that you want to do a tilt shift image of your hotel.
I got the Canon S95, which has a "tilt shift" feature. I tried it out on this town in Washington state along the Columbia River. It turns out the feature is simple fakery: (1) it blurs the top and bottom of the image, (2) it saturates the colors. Part (1) only works when the top of the image is stuff that's far away and the bottom of the image is stuff that's close up. I was mildly disappointed that it's faked using that assumption, instead of a lens that defocuses for stuff that's *actually* far away or close up, but I guess a lens that can do that is impractical for a pocket camera. The results, as shown in this photo, are a reasonable approximation of what I want, but only when shooting down on something from a high vantage point (in this case, a hill overlooking the town).
Original size
www.flickr.com/photos/pinboke/3342283443/sizes/o/
Canon EOS 5D MarkⅡ:Canon TS-E 90mm F2.8
Nakayan says:
This is the miniature garden photograph of the Shibaura island seen from the observation room of Fuji Television.
Do you think that seemingly you are a miniature garden? Since the birdseye shot was differed from, it became such performance.
(translation by "livedoor translate")
Nakayan's site Super-high-rise apartments and super-high-rise buildings (in Japanese) is here
Nakayan's tilt-shift-fake (Hakoniwa photos) datail and slideshow is here
Taken from the tower at the Imperial War Museum.
I don't think any of these are as good as the construction yard tilt shift already in my stream but thought I'd share them anyway.
taken on Tuesday Tiltshift with TSE 17/4 lens.The more I use this lens the more I begin to love it for it's perspective bending abilities. This is also a 7 shot HDR +/-3 AEB taken with 5diii camera.
Uses photoshop lens blur technique to make this real scene look like tilt-shift lens photo of a miniature set.
An abandoned barn on Route 14 near Woodstock, Illinois. Taken with a homemade tilt-shift lens on a Canon 5D. Black and white version.
I am now selling fine art magnets of my Flickr images to help fund our adoption--learn more at www.15000refrigerators.com
You take a photograph at one point in time, then that moment is immediately gone. Photography is, therefore, inextricably bound up with the past, what has gone before. An image automatically becomes history. But, also, in photographing my child I have uncovered past, present and future all tied up together - what she was when I took this photo, what she is now and what she will be.
I very much like the Susan Sontag quote: "the photographer is not simply the person who records the past, but the one who invents it." Isn't everything a construct?
Looks like a miniature ... But it is real!!!!
This is my first test whit the Tilt Shift technique (I love it!!!). I used this tutorial to guide me thru www.tiltshiftphotography.net/photoshop-tutorial.php
Hope you enjoy!
I don't have any new photos that I care to upload, so I thought I would use the new tilt-shift toy on one of my vacation photos from last winter.
It just so happened that we were there on the 90th Anniversary of the Grand Canyon being named a National Park. It's a wonderful place that I hope everybody gets to at least once in their lives.
I wanted to experiment with CS6's tilt shift feature some more, so I went back and found this shot of St. George from January 2, 2011. It snowed quite a few inches over night, and made for a very beautiful morning. The tilt shift feature is kind of cool. It doesn't have quite the same effect that a real tilt shift lens does, but its fun the play with.
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