Tilt-Shift photography is basically the use of of camera movements on small and medium size cameras. In many cases, it refers to tilting the lens relative to the image plane and using a large aperture to achieve a very shallow depth of field. The result is a blurring of parts of the image for de-emphasis purposes and the possible effect of reducing huge objects to miniature models.
Sounds complex, but here are some very nice examples that should explain everything.





















































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8 Responses to “Effective Tilt-Shift Photography”
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Awesome…
If we all lived in the world from the Mr.Rogers Intro. . .
[...] Tilt-shift Photography [...]
such a beautiful picture, amazing
I’m a daily visitor, and love the site. But forgive me, i must disagree with you. This effect is done post-production, usually with Photoshop. If you Google tilt-shift tutorial, you’ll find loads of site that will show you how to do this in just a few minutes. But for it to look really good, the picture has to have a certain perspective. Usually from overhead (at least slightly), lots of small points of interest, and something near the center to focus on.
That’s actually a Photoshop effect, called “miniature effect”:
http://photojojo.com/content/post-processing/miniature-model-effect-photoshop/
[...] have a list of the original photographers so cannot give credit. You can view more of them on the Funtasticus post. London street Tennis cour from above Beach scene tilt-shifted Sumo-wrestling match Model [...]
[...] Effective Tilt-Shift photography. Nice miniaturization effect. [...]