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AR15.COM
2/18/2009 7:59:55 AM EDT




http://www.vimeo.com/3156959
2/18/2009 8:18:50 AM EDT
[#1]
Cool.
2/18/2009 9:05:28 AM EDT
[#2]
Wow, impressive.
2/18/2009 9:05:58 AM EDT
[#3]
Thats really neat!!!
2/18/2009 11:14:14 AM EDT
[#4]
Very cool. I've seen some of his other stuff and he does an awesome job.
2/18/2009 4:35:56 PM EDT
[#5]
pretty cool
2/18/2009 4:48:35 PM EDT
[#6]
That's totally cool!  Never seen stuff like that before.  

2/18/2009 5:17:24 PM EDT
[#7]
Too slick!!
2/18/2009 9:32:33 PM EDT
[#8]
That is so cool!  T/S lenses have been around for a long time but finally someone decides to do this with them.
2/18/2009 11:50:04 PM EDT
[#9]
I need a tilt/shift lens
2/19/2009 4:37:17 AM EDT
[#10]
And I always thought tilt/shift lenses were for making buildings straight!    I'd love to learn more about how this is done.
2/19/2009 10:35:47 AM EDT
[#11]
Quoted:
And I always thought tilt/shift lenses were for making buildings straight!    I'd love to learn more about how this is done.


You can shift the lens up/down (or if it is rotated: left/right) to allow you to keep your camera parallel to the structure (like a building) in order to keep the perspective (lines) straight.

But you also can tilt the lens elements at an angle, which modifies the focal plane to be not parallel with the sensor/film.

They're a LOT of fun to play with... canon makes 3 versions, TSE24, 45, and 90. I have the wide and tele versions, and LOVE them, particularly the 90mm one. They are manual focus only... which is actually great for video (5dii).

I tend to like odd lenses... the 90mm TS and the 15mm fisheye are two of my favorite "fun" lenses. Not too practical in many situations... but definitely fun.

Unfortunately I managed to bend my 15mm fisheye lens skiing (and running video) this past weekend when a tree decided to dramatically slow down my forward progress. Amazingly enough, the only damage was cosmetic (to me and to the lens)... bent hood on the lens and a few cuts/scrapes, bruises and a bruised (or possibly fractured?) thumb bone on me. Both the camera and I still function fine, even tho we both look a little worse for the wear. It would have been interesting to have been running video at that time, cause I blacked out for part of it.
2/25/2009 10:54:50 AM EDT
[#12]
With DSLR timelapse you can fake the tilt-shift effect using photoshop.  Keith Loutit obviously has the lens, but I've faked it without:

http://www.vimeo.com/895100
2/26/2009 12:53:59 PM EDT
[#13]
Awesome!