Author | Thread |
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11/07/2009 06:46:05 AM |
I love the intersection of the concentrc circles in the water with the focal strip (is that a word?) I mean the linear section of focus. |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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11/05/2009 08:33:06 AM |
I think some might not realize you are actually using a tilt/shift lens and not a LB, which doesn't get you exactly the same look. The focused part wouldn't go straight out to the edges of the image with a lensbaby, so this TS-E lens allows you to slice up the shot in a way the lb can't - it's like you've caught them passing between two worlds. I like how the strip of focus runs counter to the overall horizontal orientation of everything else, creates a tension. A TS-E is on my wish list. :) |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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11/04/2009 10:16:11 AM |
The vertical strip of focus is interesting. Just catching the second ducks beak. Works well i think. |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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11/04/2009 04:21:43 AM |
wow all of these great photos make me want to go shoot more. |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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11/04/2009 02:30:21 AM |
interesting to have a strip of sharp focus travel almost vertically through the image |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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11/03/2009 02:17:57 PM |
Actually, he is looking at you. If he were to turn his head and point it at you he wouldn't be able to see you completely because of monocular vision. Their view is very wide because their eyes are flat and not oval, like ours. They can see almost everything in focus, near or far, just like a wide angle lens.
Message edited by author 2009-11-03 19:19:57. |
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Photographer found comment helpful. |
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