View allAll Photos Tagged tiltandshift
Celebrations following Javier Hernandez scores the opening goal of the match. Ajax went on to win the match 1-2 but United progressed 3-2 on aggregate. United face Athletico Bilbao in the next round.
2010 © VLADIMIR ZAKHAROV.
All rights reserved
Please don't use any of my images on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission
Really talented but impossibly miserable singing group, snapped inside Central Park, New York, and jazzed up a bit using TiltShiftGenerator on the iPad.
Photos from practice with my choir, The Polytech Choir. Juha Kuivanen is the artistic director of the choir.
These were shot with my DIY tilt-and-shift lens.
24mm ts-e. Thanks to Lucy for agreeing to be a guinea pig, Strobe Metz 54MZ-3 fired into gold reflector camera right 128th.
Leftover of my London trip. Part of the architecture from the Bermondsey tube station
Settings: 1/6 sec, ƒ/3.5, ISO 100, TS-E 24 mm
Bermondsey tube station is a London Underground station. It is situated in the eastern part of Bermondsey in the London Borough of Southwark, and so also serves the western part of Rotherhithe.
The station itself was designed by Ian Ritchie Architects and was originally intended to have a multi-storey office building sitting on top. London Underground have yet to realise this second phase of the scheme.
It is on the Jubilee line, having been built as part of the Jubilee Line Extension between London Bridge and Canada Water stations. It is notable for its extensive use of natural light. The main station entrance is situated on the south side of Jamaica Road. The station is in Travelcard Zone 2. The station was opened on 17 September 1999.
I made a good deal. You can see he is happy with it but doesn't want to show it. I am still alive. ..
Settings: 1/125, ƒ/7.1, ISO 50, Canon TS-E 90 mm
Strobist info: beautydish cam left for fill, triggered with pocket wizards.
If You Fave it, please Comment! ;-)
View big on black!!
No invitations please! No invitations please! No invitations please!
www.peterdebock.nl (c) 2014
Choo-choo train at the Midland Railway Centre at Butterley... tried to do a fake tilt-shift, I can never tell if its worked or not nowadays...
Photos from an after concert party with my choir, The Polytech Choir.
These were shot with my DIY tilt-and-shift lens.
Photos from an after concert party with my choir, The Polytech Choir.
These were shot with my DIY tilt-and-shift lens.
Photos from an after concert party with my choir, The Polytech Choir.
These were shot with my DIY tilt-and-shift lens.
The Houses of Parliament - I thought I would try and create a tilt and shift lens shot. This was the first attempt from an old picture I took back in 2005 on my old Sony T7
artsy wind chimes at the Biennale on Cockatoo Island, Sydney
odonovansontour.blogspot.com.au/2012/06/why-are-photograp...
Canon TS24mm, 1/100, f:8, ISO 200
Must see this one big on black!! (press "L")!
If You Fave it, please Comment! ;-)
No invitations please! No invitations please! No invitations please! No invitations please!
Photos from an after concert party with my choir, The Polytech Choir.
These were shot with my DIY tilt-and-shift lens.
These are the toy fishermans toy sheds ... LOL
Just waiting for Thunderbird 2 to come over the dunes
Photos from practice with my choir, The Polytech Choir. Juha Kuivanen is the artistic director of the choir.
These were shot with my DIY tilt-and-shift lens.
My first attempt to fake the tilt&shift miniature effect.
Original picture here:
www.flickr.com/photos/ferdinand1977/456878434/in/set-7215...
Here's how I did it: www.tiltshiftphotography.net/photoshop-tutorial.php
Several shot (6) using a 35mm T&S lens. Perspective is pretty well controlled but the lighting wasn't great. I almost like the single wide angle shot much better despite the detail this shot contains, especially at it's 39 Megapixel original size.
The original is a 300MB monster.
I did actually try to vary the exposure based on the lighting but there was a near 3 stop difference in the scenes mid tones. Basically what I'm saying is without filtration there was no way to equalize the lighting.
Nevertheless, this was a beautiful view, and we stayed (2hours) to watch the sunset. A bit chilly at ~40F with a nice steady 10mph breeze but well worth it.
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