View allAll Photos Tagged tiltandshift
This is my first effort at a tilt shift effect shot, using tiltandshiftmaker.com. The original photo was taken from the top of Lincoln cathederal.
Rain drops on a Japanese Maple. Ealing, London, England, UK.
Taken with a Canon TS-E 90 mm f/2.8 tilt and shift lens to maximise depth of focus.
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Lovely view of the house, spoiled somewhat by some remaining scaffolding and other detritus (vans 'n stuff). She is looking mighty fine though after her clean and repair. Money and time well spent. They need to do the rest now, but it will be a shame for it all to go under cover again.
Added a touch of fake tilt/shift just for something different. Has it worked? I can never tell.
... is the biggest Parisian bookshop, whose several stores are situated around the place Saint-Michel.
I like the idea that a bookshop is kind of a jewel box...;-)
P.S. still in the Christmas mood...;-)
press L
On the way to Vauxhall crossed Tate Britain and remembering the fine shots of the stairs from my Flickr colleagues and friends. Then It's hard to pass the Tate without taking a shot knowing it's 100 meters away and living hundreds of miles away ;-) To keep it a bit different from the gays I processed this one in a color version.
Settings: 1/60, ƒ/5, ISO 400, TS-E 24 mm slightly shifted, PP Lr
View big on black!!
For more pictures and my website
www.peterdebock.nl (c) 2014
Update: I finally finished the lens.
I had to try my ghetto DIY tilt-and-shift lens with the canonical subject of a construction yard. Here I'm tilting the lens upwards.
I simply handheld the disassembled optics of an AF Nikkor 35 mm f/2 D lens in front of the lens mount of a Nikon D50 camera. Manual exposure.
The concept seems to be working. The next thing I need to do, is to figure out a way to permanently attach the optics to the camera mount with some sort of a flexible tube.
The warm colors come from setting sun, and the red hue in the ladder is light reflected off a red wall.
See two crops here showing the plane of focus.
would the graffiti artist Mr Shiz take a bow......and the spray tagger who covered his work take 5 minutes to realize that perhaps he is best off with crayons rather than a spray can.....I know I took this shot in 2012, but the tag has always irritated me.
This is my tilt&shift lens I use with the Fuji-X by means of an adapter. A collector lens I'm so happy to own. But what warms my heart it is not collecting lenses, rather to be able to capture incredible images thanks to the t&s features.
Just using iphone and wonderful apps to create this tilt and shift effect..
The apps that I'm using is FX Photo Studio. This amazing app is FREE for limited time only.
Get it here itunes.apple.com/en/app/fx-photo-studio/id312506856?mt=8
Project "Hanna" Thanks to Jos and Hanna.
One shot, no HDR. Settings: 1/40, ƒ/6.3, ISO 100, Canon 90mm TS-E, full in the tilt position (blur from the lens), PP Ps
Strobist info: Reflector with grid triggered with pocket wizard
There will be more!
Don't make Flickr a "like" site so if you fav please comment
See my old pictures on www.flickr.com/photos/127220285@N03/
No invitations please! No invitations please! No invitations please! No invitations please!
www.peterdebock.nl (c) 2014
10 January 2013. Narrowboats tied up on the Regent's Canal in front of the Fish and Coal buildings. King's Cross, London, England UK. Taken with a Canon TS-E 90mm f2.8 tilt and shift lens for that "Toy Town" look. The Fish and Coal buildings were built as offices to house clerks employed to monitor the flow of freight through the goods yards. The first block was built in 1851 as part of Lewis Cubitt’s design for the Goods Yard. Additional blocks were built in the early 1860s.
A Year in Pictures image 10 of 365.
Something I have been working on for a little while now, It's all held together with gaffers tape at the moment, while i figure out how to get a clean connection with the bag bellows and the front standard. I may move this project over to my Cambo 4x5, I just built this up on a damaged Toyo to see if I could get it to work.