Author Topic: Tiltshift effect.  (Read 2830 times)

Someone made a topic about this a while ago. I forget who it was but I don't feel like digging it up. It was called "Miniaturizing Images" and it had something almost exactly similar to this. I think I pulled of something fairly similar, which is actually called Tiltshift Photography, here's my results:

After:

Before:


Reference used:
http://i.i.com.com/cnwk.1d/i/bto/20090107/TiltShift-before-n-after.png

Yeah, that's pretty much it. It makes them look like a city of plastic-like buildings if done in a city environment.

Yeah, that's pretty much it. It makes them look like a city of plastic-like buildings if done in a city environment.
It's actually not difficult if you've got your wits about you in your image editing program of choice.

Why is the image smaller afterwards?

Why is the image smaller afterwards?
Probably Photobucket scaled it down for size issues.

I think Taboo (it was him, right?) did it a little bit better and had a different technique but damn Sirrus I couldn't even tell it was the same image at first.

makes it look like its ispy and robot chicken lawl

I think Taboo (it was him, right?) did it a little bit better and had a different technique but damn Sirrus I couldn't even tell it was the same image at first.

'Twas me.
http://forum.blockland.us/index.php?topic=133590.0


Woah, that's neat.

How2do?

recycling one of my images from the old thread


They look like plastic buildings D:

Woah, that's neat.

How2do?
For my image, I just duplicated the base image two times, on one duplication I did a brightness/contrast adjustment through curves to get better saturation and on another I I did a high blur Gaussian blur. I added layer masks to the two duplications and faded both masks from the focus point.

For my image, I just duplicated the base image two times, on one duplication I did a brightness/contrast adjustment through curves to get better saturation and on another I I did a high blur Gaussian blur. I added layer masks to the two duplications and faded both masks from the focus point.

Ah, I would have never thought of the Gaussian blur, id have more rather used an adjusted frosted glass blur.

Ah, I would have never thought of the Gaussian blur, id have more rather used an adjusted frosted glass blur.

I use lens blur, personally.

Before:


After:


I don't think this one turned out very good.