View allAll Photos Tagged tiltshift

fotografía del sector de guayacán en coquimbo Chile

My Tiltshift, a little late but better later than never.

Slideshow: www.flickr.com/photos/jonatasaraujo/show/

 

Testando a técnica de tilt-shift. A intenção é deixar a imagem com a aparência de que é uma miniatura do objeto real. A ilusão de ótica realmente surpreendeu. Gostei!!!

(Photo by Bonnie Burton.)

Original photo here.

Location: Costa Mesa, CA

On the Ferris Wheel

Tilt shift fake taken on Circumvesuviana from Naples to Sorrento

 

Taken on iPhone 4 using default camera app and modified in TiltShiftGen app.

Like my toy planes?

Minitalia is a theme park where the main buildings of the city are reconstructed in miniature..

 

After seeing this picture uploaded the other day by Rich, I thought I would have a crack at creating my own miniature scene. Nout special but thought it was worth an upload seeing as I am bored to death and trying to put off doing an essay.

 

WBT 174 is seen climbing up Lumb Brook Lane some time last summer.

Rabenstein bei Chemnitz

I'll be teaching again this fall. Tilt Shift photography has been coming up a lot lately. I think I'll have the students make some of their own.

The park has numerous pieces of public art. this was one of my favorites.

my first try to make a tiltshift-fake

First attempt :)

@ La Manga del Mar Menor, Spain

maquete de mim pescando (fake)

saiba mais em flymagazine.com.br

Experimenting the 'Fake City' idea

The Capitol Records building in Hollywood, CA.

Canon TS-E 24 lens with the Canon 5D body.

Took this from the parking lot downtown Raleigh NC. Thought it might make a great tiltshift pic.

A picture taken from Rame, Cornwall of HMS Daring, a type 45 destroyer, presumably heading towards Devonport, given the tiltshift treatment.

The top 3 finishers in the Junior 4x100 at the 2011 Penn Relays.

Llangollen Railway Siding North Wales

Been meaning to try some of this tilt shift stuff, so dug out a shot from last year whilst cycling through Iceland's interior. This couple were coming in the opposite direction.

I was reading online after having seen some wonderful tiltshift photography about how to get the best tile shift mechanically, and not via photoshop.

 

Not having a tiltshift lens or a lensbaby, I grabbed an old SMC PENTAX-A 1:2 50MM that I had put through its paces for many years on my K1000. The K`1000 is now a museum piece on the shelf in my office, so the 50mm would be a good donor device.

 

My first attempts were just "free lensing", hold the non-connected lens in front of my 7D. I had trouble focusing as I just couldn't get close enough without worrying about hitting the mirro with the edge of the lens.

 

So I got out my magnifying glass and my small screwdrivers and stripped the back end off the 50mm. Oh my. I took off the apeture setting gear and basically anything else that had a screw holding it in.

 

Now the above image is a "free lensing" shot with that device. I've found the focusing spot and believe I now have a crude tilt shift.

 

Tomorrow I hit the workshop and build some kind of attachment device (I've seen plans for several online) that keeps the back plane of the lens at 44mm from the focal plane in the camera. This should result in a pure tiltshift!

 

More to come as I experiment with this device!

tiltshift Tulum beach, picture from our honeymoon :) this is the original

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