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Tilt-shiftPhotography Tilt-shiftPhotography - our featured image

Tilt-shift photography is a type of photography that uses a special camera lens to create the illusion of a miniature scene. The technique is often used to make cityscapes and landscapes appear as if they are models.

AOI thinking about Tilt-shift Photography [+_~]-/

Overview and Quickfacts

Tilt-shift photography is a type of photography that involves the use of a camera with a special lens that allows the photographer to control the plane of focus in the image. This type of photography is often used to create the illusion of a miniature world, and it can be used to create some very interesting and unique effects.

Can understand it also, as:
Miniature faking, fake tilt-shift, miniature photography, toy camera effect.

Categorize it as:
Impressionism, Modernism

.: Dreaming :.
holds a HAIKU for the art style
:. Thought is power .:

Detailed Description

Tilt-shift photography is a type of photography in which the camera is tilted to produce a selective focus effect, resulting in photos that look like miniature scenes. This technique is often used to make cityscapes and landscapes appear as if they are models. Tilt-shift photography was first used in the early 19th century for architectural photography, but it wasn’t until the 1950s that it became popular for use in advertising and product photography. In recent years, the effect has become popular in fine art photography and video. Some of the most famous tilt-shift photographers include: Eugene Atget, who used the technique to capture the streets of Paris Andre Kertesz, who used it to create his famous “New York City” photograph Irving Penn, who used it for his fashion photography Annie Leibovitz, who used it for her celebrity portraits There are many famous paintings that have been created using the tilt-shift effect, including: “The Hay Wagon” by American painter Andrew Wyeth “Nighthawks” by American painter Edward Hopper “The Bathers” by French painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir “The City” by Russian painter Wassily Kandinsky

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1. Tilt-shift photography is a type of photography that involves tilting and/or shifting the camera lens to create a miniature effect. 2. The miniature effect is created by making the subject appear smaller than it actually is. 3. This effect is often used in landscape photography to make the scene appear more toy-like. 4. Tilt-shift lenses are specially designed lenses that allow for the tilting and/or shifting of the lens. 5. These lenses are often very expensive, making tilt-shift photography a somewhat exclusive form of photography. 6. The tilting and shifting of the lens alters the plane of focus, which is what creates the miniature effect. 7. This effect can also be achieved with Photoshop or other image editing software, but it is much more difficult to achieve a realistic effect without a tilt-shift lens. 8. Tilt-shift photography often makes use of wide-angle lenses to further exaggerate the miniature effect. 9. The depth of field is often shallow in tilt-shift photography, which also contributes to the miniature effect. 10. Tilt-shift photography can be used for both still images and video. 11. Time-lapse photography is a type of photography that often makes use of the miniature effect created by tilt-shift lenses. 12. Tilt-shift lenses are often used in architectural photography to correct for the distortion that can be caused by wide-angle lenses. 13. Tilt-shift photography can be used to create abstract images by selectively blurring parts of the image. 14. Tilt-shift lenses can also be used for macro photography, allowing for extremely close-up images. 15. Tilt-shift photography is often used in product photography to make the products appear more realistic. 16. Tilt-shift lenses can also be used for portraiture, although the effect is often less flattering than with other subjects. 17. Tilt-shift photography can be used to create surreal images by combining elements from different photos. 18. The miniature effect can also be achieved with tilt-shift video, which often gives the footage a dreamlike quality. 19. Tilt-shift photography is often used in advertising and fashion photography to make the subjects appear more perfect and idealized. 20. Tilt-shift lenses are also sometimes used in astrophotography to correct for the distortion of stars caused by wide-angle lenses.
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.. robbel bob

Visual Examples from our image gallery

Coming soon, we are so slow .. might never come

Artists, Paintings, and more

(be aware, can be highly speculative)

Artists (be aware, speculation possible):

1. William Henry Fox Talbot (1800-1877) 2. Roger Fenton (1819-1869) 3. Lewis Carroll (1832-1898) 4. Julia Margaret Cameron (1815-1879) 5. Oscar Rejlander (1813-1875) 6. Henry Peach Robinson (1830-1901) 7. John Everett Millais (1829-1896) 8. Dante Gabriel Rossetti (1828-1882) 9. Edward Burne-Jones (1833-1898) 10. William Morris (1834-1896) 11. John Ruskin (1819-1900) 12. Gertrude Jekyll (1843-1932) 13. Alfred Stieglitz (1864-1946) 14. Paul Strand (1890-1976) 15. Walker Evans (1903-1975) 16. Berenice Abbott (1898-1991) 17. Margaret Bourke-White (1904-1971) 18. Ansel Adams (1902-1984) 19. Imogen Cunningham (1883-1976) 20. Edward Weston (1886-1958) 21. Dorothea Lange (1895-1965) 22. Aaron Siskind (1903-1991) 23. Minor White (1908-1976) 24. Garry Winogrand (1928-1984) 25. Lee Friedlander (1934- ) 26. Joel Meyerowitz (1938- ) 27. William Eggleston (1939- ) 28. Stephen Shore (1947- ) 29. Jeff Wall (1946- ) 30. Thomas Struth (1954- )

Artworks (be aware, speculation possible)

1. “The Hay Wagon” by American painter Andrew Wyeth (1947) 2. “The Madonna and Child” by Italian painter Michelangelo (1498-1499) 3. “The Last Supper” by Italian painter Leonardo da Vinci (1498) 4. “The Mona Lisa” by Italian painter Leonardo da Vinci (1503-1506) 5. “The Birth of Venus” by Italian painter Sandro Botticelli (1486) 6. “The Scream” by Norwegian painter Edvard Munch (1893) 7. “The Starry Night” by Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh (1889) 8. “The Night Cafe” by Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh (1888) 9. “Sunflowers” by Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh (1888) 10. “Cafe Terrace at Night” by Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh (1888) 11. “The Persistence of Memory” by Spanish painter Salvador Dali (1931) 12. “Nighthawks” by American painter Edward Hopper (1942) 13. “One Hundred and Fifty-two West Fifty-seventh Street” by American painter Edward Hopper (1954) 14. “Chop Suey” by American painter Edward Hopper (1929) 15. “New York Movie” by American painter Edward Hopper (1939) 16. “Office at Night” by American painter Edward Hopper (1940) 17. “Gas” by American painter Edward Hopper (1940) 18. “Nighthawks II” by American painter Edward Hopper (1959) 19. “The Sleeping Gypsy” by French painter Henri Rousseau (1897) 20. “The Dream” by French painter Henri Rousseau (1910) 21. “The Snake Charmer” by French painter Henri Rousseau (1907) 22. “Surprised!” by French painter Henri Rousseau (1891) 23. “Tiger in a Tropical Storm (Surprised!)” by French painter Henri Rousseau (1891) 24. “The Sleeping Gypsy” by French painter Henri Rousseau (1897) 25. “The Dream” by French painter Henri Rousseau (1910) 26. “The Snake Charmer” by French painter Henri Rousseau (1907) 27. “Surprised!” by French painter Henri Rousseau (1891) 28. “Tiger in a Tropical Storm (Surprised!)” by French painter Henri Rousseau (1891) 29. “The Isle of the Dead” by Swiss painter Arnold Böcklin (1880) 30. “The Wanderer Above the Sea of Fog” by German painter Caspar David Friedrich (1818)

Epoch

The time period of the art style Tilt-shift Photography is from the early 1990s to the present.

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