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Tilt-Shift Photography, or How to Make Everything Look Tiny

This is a large format camera:

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Unlike your digital camera (which most likely doesn’t even need you to focus), or an old-school SLR film camera (which only needs focus, shutter speed, and aperture), a large format camera has a lot of controls. Check out how each piece moves in 3 dimensions in the picture below:

MTclassic_Image2

2 of the adjustments you can make are called tilt and shift. Without getting TOO technical, what you’re doing is moving different focus planes to interact with each other in a way that you can’t really do with other cameras, thus selecting a certain region of the film to be in focus. There are modern tools that can do this on modern cameras (even digital!) – for example, lensbaby.com offers a lens that can make those adjustments. What will this do for you? You may remember this picture from a previous blog entry:

gaussian

So, if you don’t have an extra $350 to spend on a lens (ok, let’s face it, you’re going to use it to buy video games and Mt. Dew), you can still acheive this same effect with a Gaussian Blur. It’s a great effect. You take a picture of normal sized people and magically they become miniatures!

Select a round (circular or oval-shaped) selection around the center, in focus, portion of your photo. Invert your selection and feather it by a lot. 100 pixels isn’t too many. Select Gaussian Blur from the filters section and experiment with settings. Can you make a photo look like these?

4033190375_610a9e3bf8

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Email me *your* contributions at justin(at)internaldrive.com (@ symbol left out intentionally to prevent robotic spam crawling!) and I’ll post the best ones in a future entry.

October 27th, 2009 | Tags: , ,

Posted in: iD Tech Bloggers

One Response to Tilt-Shift Photography, or How to Make Everything Look Tiny

  1. Great article and very interesting. I actively use pure digital cameras and specialise in wedding photography but the article provoked some ideas I can explore especially with photoshop.

  2. Collin on July 5th, 2010 at 11:20 am

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This entry was posted on Tuesday, Oct 27th at 10:04 am and is filed under iD Tech Bloggers. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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