Since the first time I read this tutorial, I’ve been wanting to try out fake tilt shift, and I was reminded of that desire when I read and clicked Stefan Jansson’s comment on ichimusai’s Hötorget post. Stefan has posted some excellent fake tilt shift photos on his site, check it out!
This week’s challenge is to create your own Lilliputian world, by no means are you restricted to using fake tilt shift, even though I am going to
Have a nice weekend!
Tags: Challenges
I started making one picture. Then another one. Then a third one. Actually, a whole bunch of them was the result. I selected six of them and put them here on Flickr.
I have again a couple that I think went pretty well but I like this one the best (I think)…
WOw, spännande, precis som resten av ditt set!
Have not been thinking tilt-shift but actual models, since I sometimes take photos of that sort of thing. Älvrummet, where there is a big planning model of Gothenburg on both sides of the river, is open only for a couple of hours in the middle of the day, a little hard for me to get to – but I have taken photos there on more than one occasion this year. Came across one of the sets, when going through my April folders and picked one for uploading.
I think that is just as good, in a different way!
I love that statue there in the middle, it is a great focus point for hte eye. The very straight lines of round-cut trees is also pretty cool and the wooden block houses really makes it a strange feeling of that someone is not really finished modeling it yet.
I haven’t had the time to experiment, and I haven’t had the time to take any good shots either, but I really enjoyed doing this!
It is great and I really like the aquare crop as well, that makes it really model-esque in my opinion. Really well processed, did you use the lens blur function in photoshop or something else?
Gaussian blur in gimp!
http://gimparoo.blogspot.com/2007/02/fake-tilt-shift.html