Trying my hand at Tilt-shift photography with the iPhone
#1
Posted 13 September 2009 - 07:41 PM
http://tinyurl.com/ooq5zm
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#2
Posted 13 September 2009 - 08:32 PM
#3
Posted 13 September 2009 - 08:51 PM
Thank you. Yes, I have yet to get the hang of it. Some subjects are easy, others a little harder.
Here's the one I'm using - http://artandmobile.com/tiltshift/
There is an online app and a desk top app for your Mac which requires Adobe Air, I've not tried them though.
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#4 Guest_coaten_*
Posted 14 September 2009 - 01:52 PM
#5
Posted 14 September 2009 - 09:37 PM
What I like about this is it's got an Air app you can try out first. Just to make your head that little bit bigger Genshin, I think a lot of your pictures are a lot better than the samples on the site.
I need to find some time to try this out.
#6
Posted 15 September 2009 - 12:01 AM
http://tinyurl.com/ooq5zm
Genshin isn't it a great little app. I downloaded it the other day and fell instantly in love. I need to take some more bird's eye view pictures for it to work better but here's a couple I had a go at.
[attachment=374:sanfran.jpg] [attachment=375:nyc.png]
I also came across this awesome site a few months ago which I believe is Tilt-shift video.
http://www.vimeo.com/1785993
#7
Posted 15 September 2009 - 12:32 AM
I need to find some time to try this out.
Thank you indeed.
I also came across this awesome site a few months ago which I believe is Tilt-shift video.
http://www.vimeo.com/1785993
Wow, they are great! Please, do share some more!
These are my favourites.
And some tilt-shift stop motion video here by MockMoon who is famous in Japan for this.
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#8
Posted 15 September 2009 - 12:45 AM
Those videos are great. If anyone wants to try this optically on a SLR (rather than post processing an image) check out http://www.lensbaby.com/
I believe that is what was used for these videos - shooting time lapse with a D-SLR - its an amazing result.
#10
Posted 16 September 2009 - 09:40 PM
As time allows, I'll have a bit more of a play. I haven't been using the iPhone version, but the AIR version.
#11
Posted 16 September 2009 - 11:19 PM
Yes, agreed. It doesn't work too well if your subject is too close or at eye level - that's the whole illusion, to look as though it were a miniature viewed from above.
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#12 Guest_coaten_*
Posted 17 September 2009 - 07:28 AM
And yes, if you use it on a close-up subject, it's just a selective-focus effect and loses the whole miniature world feel. That has a place in the scheme of things, though, and the result is not unlike the very-shallow depth-of-field style popular in contemporary culinary photography.
#13
Posted 17 September 2009 - 07:33 AM
The lensbaby gallery had some good examples of other applications selective focus can be used for. Some of them were quite interesting.
#14
Posted 17 September 2009 - 08:36 AM
And yes, if you use it on a close-up subject, it's just a selective-focus effect and loses the whole miniature world feel. That has a place in the scheme of things, though, and the result is not unlike the very-shallow depth-of-field style popular in contemporary culinary photography.
I saw the ad too. It was for rediATM. Is tilt shift an old technique that has become popular or just something relatively new?
#15
Posted 17 September 2009 - 08:42 AM
Movements have been available on view cameras since the early days of photography. Nikon introduced a lens providing shift movements for their 35 mm SLR cameras in the mid 1960s. - Wikipedia.
Tilt-shift has seen a surge in popularity since early last year. There are classes at Nikon on tilt-shift methods.
Must Love Japan See Japan in motion
YouTube channel See what I'm up to in Japan
Genshin on Facebook
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Crusade Watch, anti-evangelsim, anti-religious conversion
BELIEVE WHATEVER YOU WANT TO BELIEVE - JUST DON'T EXPECT ME TO BELIEVE IT AND DON'T TRY PUSHING IT ON OTHERS.
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