View allAll Photos Tagged tiltshifter
At “We’re Here!” today we are playing around with Tilt Shifting.
I was not familiar with this technique, and right now was a hard time for me to learn about it. I guess the best photographic candidates are taken from a height with multiple objects below. There are very few tall buildings where I live and I wouldn’t want to visit the ones I know of – like the hospital! So my photo isn’t the most beautiful ever, and since I have neither a tilt shift lens, camera setting, or software, it is improvised. But it kind of gives the impression of looking down at a miniature – and that’s the object.
A cruise ship getting towed out of Kiel harbor
Kiel (Germany)
To bad, the tilt shift 'filter' blurred out the two workmen standing on the bollard. (on top of the white square behind the tug)
We're here visiting Tilt shifting
90 year old preserved and mainline certified London, Midland and Scottish (LMS) Jubilee Class 4-6-0 steam locomotive 45596 'Bahamas' and support coach coasting southbound in 'tiltshift' mode near the village of Long Eaton in the County of Nottinghamshire (UK) on April 17th 2025.
45596 was on a mainline light engine movement from Grosmont (North Yorkshire Moors Railway) to Kidderminster (Severn Valley Railway) for parcipitation in the SVR's Easter weekend spring steam gala.
45596 was designed by LMS Chief Mechanical Engineer William Stanier, built at the North British Locomotive Company Glasgow Works as LMS 5596 in January 1935 and withdrawn from service by British Railways on July 23rd 1966.
The 'Headboard' reads 'Bahamas Locomotive Society'.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LMS_Jubilee_Class_5596_Bahamas
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LMS_Jubilee_Class
All my Jubilee Class photographs www.flickr.com/photos/stuart166axe/tags/jubileeclass/
All my tiltshift's www.flickr.com/photos/stuart166axe/tags/tiltshift
Photograph taken by and copyright of my occasional photostream contributor Mr David Lewis and is posted here with very kind permission.
Tiltshifted
3x Virgin Class 390 EMUs at Euston Station London (UK)
The original shot by fellow enthusiast Dave and posted here with kind permission.
Tiltshifted version of Direct Rail Services Class 37 locomotive 37087 'Keighley and Worth Valley Railway' leads 37194 with the 3S60 Stowmarket- Shenfield Railhead Treatment Train approaching Chelmsford Station.
This is the first RHTT of the 2011 season on the GEML . (only 2 weeks later than everyone else...)
37087 is the last operational class 37 on the mainline to still have split headcode boxes and it still has its original 1972 TOPS number.
37087 entered service as D6787 on December 31st 1962.
Super shot of the train by David and posted here with kind permission.
Thought it would be fun to take the now-famous twitter post of the hudson rive crash and tiltshift it. Original posted from @jkrums here. Used tiltshifter to render the effect.
Today the We're Here group members are attempting a bit of Tilt Shifting .
I know where to go to get a good tilt shift shot but as I'm not allowed this was taken in the weedpatch using the tilt shift setting on my little Canon camera.
Tiltshift version.
GBRf shed 66710 receives admiring looks (hopefully!) at speed through Chelmsford railway station (UK) on the 3 times daily 4L02 Hams Hall-Felixstowe liner.
Super shot from fellow enthusiast Dave and posted here with kind permission.
Taken From The Prom at New Brighton Merseyside
The 11, 000 ton Container Ship Perseus j Arriving at Liverpool
Nikon D60 Sigma 70-300mm Lens
This has been Tiltshifter
Don't know where this photograph came from but it was in my hard drive so it's got the tiltshift treatment..
High Chelmer Shopping Centre, Chelmsford in August 2003. A postcard scan of this view taken just to the left in 1970 can be seen at this link. Looks somewhat smaller now or the modern person is larger! The Boots facade has changed considerably even though the corporate logo remains the same. Boots are possibly the only original tenant left from when the Centre was built around 1970.
This has been 'tiltshifted' and is viewable at normal scale elsewhere in my photostream
Springfield Park Road in Chelmsford (UK)
A little known fact is this housing estate was originally called the ' Springfield Allied Workers' housing estate when it was built in 1935.
Confusingly for delivery drivers there's a Springfield Park Hill, Springfield Park Parade, Springfield Park Avenue and Springfield Park Lane on the estate too.. ;-) The area is also the home to Chelmsford Prison. (just behind the houses on the left.)
The estate name doesn't seem to be used much nowadays.
Chelmsford's High Street on a rare sunny summers day a few years ago.
This has been 'tiltshifted' and is viewable at normal scale elsewhere in my photostream
This photograph from a couple of places down my photostream was just begging to be tiltshifted!
This is Springfield Park Road in Chelmsford (UK)
please click here to view large size
here's the original