View allAll Photos Tagged tilt_shift
St. George's, Grenada May 2011
A friend of mine is a big fan of tilt-shift photography and introduced it to me. I think it's pretty cool and wanted to take a shot at giving one of my shot's this miniaturized look. What do you think?
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Tilt shift with slow shutter speed and a gel on a small flashgun.
Model: Paul Cooper @ Colours Agency - Model & Creative Management
Stylist: Roisin - The Fashion Mermaid Stylist
Thank you to Andrew Moore for letting me use his studio.
All images are © Copyright Loraine Ross 2004 -2012 - No unauthorized copying or use permitted.
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My second attempt at some fake Tilt Shift editing using PSE9. Used a Gaussian Blur and a layer mask Gradient technique.
Tamron 18-270mm F/3.5-6.3 Di II VC PZD.
This is a tilt-shift shot that went horribly wrong :-).
A ball head might kick absolute ass when it comes to ease of use, but in this application, it's like driving nails with a block of tofu. It also doesn't help that I am actually blind as a bat, and rely heavily on Liveview for really fine adjustments to camera settings.
(Actually, I got really frustrated I decided to botch one REAL bad intentionally so I can laugh about it).
M.C.Escher would be proud.
Just started attempting to fake the tilt/Shift effect in photoshop, happy with some of the pictures. Still trying to get the blur and the focus range right. Guess where... Yupp taken from the eye in London.
Just playing around with fake tilt shift, attempting to make scenes look like miniatures or diaromas
Horsethief Lake State Park, across the river from The Dalles, Oregon
This one looks a little better than the first one, but I'm still not feeling it as a model/miniature.
Blog entry: Fake tilt-shift with Paint Shop Pro
Adding a lot of tilt to tilt-shift lens at large apertures gives a sort of miniturization effect. This is a crop of the previous cave shot framing the area around the mouth of the cave. The effect would be greater if I had opened the lens up more, but my intention, as I mentioned in the prior shot, was to narrow the focal plane from the tree to the cave. This was just a side effect to the background.
Tilt-shift view from the ruin's of La Roche en Ardennes (unedited version: www.flickr.com/photos/joost81/2458917465/)
Tilt shift photography makes regular scenes look like miniatures. These are are photographs of actual scenes, not minis.