Make a molehill out of a mountain with Tilt Shift Focus
Got a desire to mess with some pictures you have by controlling blur or making full-sized objects look like miniatures? I've just played with some software called Tilt-Shift-Focus that mimics the way tilt shift lenses work. By artfully applying selective blur, you can make objects look they are part of a train set. There is another effect that duplicates the look of zoom movement in a still photo.There are several modes that let you define where the blur and sharpness is positioned in your image. You can also use a paintbrush tool to draw sharpness onto an image that is pre-blurred.
To use the software, you manipulate control points. At first it seems very counter-intuitive, but with a little practice it starts to make sense. Of course, this software is not going to duplicate what an expensive lens can do, but I found it fun to manipulate some photos from my archives and 'miniaturize' parts of the photos.
One thing I noticed was that at times loading and saving JPEG images was very slow. I also wish there was some built-in help to get you started, but the developer does have some good tutorials and a helpful videos on his website.
If you are looking to do this on an iPhone check out our review here. You can also simulate this effect in Photoshop, and we have you covered there too.
The software sells for US$14.99 and requires OS X 10.5 or later. It's worth a spin if you are interested in doing these kinds of effects.
Here are some examples I created:
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Source: http://tsf.dev-lux.com/
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Got a desire to mess with some pictures you have by controlling blur or making full-sized objects look like miniatures? I've just played...
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Ugh... the examples in the gallery demonstrate exactly how you should *not* make tilt-shift pictures...
March 18 2010 at 3:24 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyTiltShift Generator from Art&Mobile
http://labs.artandmobile.com/tiltshift/
Also available for the iPhone for $ .99
Two keys to making more real-looking fake miniature images:
- The perspective from which the photo is taken should be from up high, looking down, because this is the way our brain is accustomed to viewing real miniature sets. Photos taken at 'ground level' dont' usually end up looking as convincing as those taken from a higher vantage point.
- It helps to add an almost unnatural amount of sharpnsess and saturation to the image along with the tilt-shift effect. Again because the majority of miniature sets we see are painted and decorated in unnaturally bright colors.
There's a also a very good free web based service for this...
http://tiltshiftmaker.com/
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