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Optical Tricks with Tilt-Shift Lenses

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  • čas přidán 18. 08. 2024
  • John Warkentin, the Technology Evangelist at michaels camera presents a range of live demonstrations, samples and applications of Tilt-Shift Lenses across a wide selection of topics in this 42 minute Live Seminar held as part of our long running free Lunchtime series held in-store in Melbourne at the corner of Elizabeth and Lonsdale Street.
    The live demonstrations in this seminar utilise a Full Frame Canon 5DMk3 and the Canon TS-E 45mm F2.8 Lens. It is running Tethered with the Canon EOS Utility in Liveview mode enabling a real time view of what the camera is seeing. It is this feature of the modern DSLR which greatly simplifies the use of the all manual controls of the Tilt-Shift Lens.
    The subject for this live capture demonstration is a line of additional Tilt-Shift Lenses that are both in stock or available for rent at michaels camera.
    Listed in order from front to back they are:
    Nikon 24mm F3.5 PC-E Nikkor
    Nikon 85mm F2.8 PC-E Micro Nikkor
    Canon TS-E 17mm F4
    Canon TS-E 24mm F3.5
    Canon TS-E 90mm F2.8
    Samyang Tilt/Shift 24mm F3.5 ED AS UMC
    The Samyang Lens is uniquely available in a very wide range of Camera Mounts.
    They are: Canon EF and EF-M, Fujifilm X, Olympus / Panasonic Four Thirds and Micro Four Thirds, Pentax K, Samsung NX, and Sony A and E
    Direct links to Purchase these Tilt-Shift Lenses:
    Canon 17mm
    michaels.com.au...
    Canon 24mm
    michaels.com.au...
    Canon 45mm
    michaels.com.au...
    Canon 90mm
    michaels.com.au...
    Nikon 24mm
    michaels.com.au...
    Nikon 45mm
    michaels.com.au...
    Nikon 85mm
    michaels.com.au...
    Samyang 24mm Canon Mount
    michaels.com.au...
    Samyang 24mm Nikon Mount
    michaels.com.au...
    www.michaels.co...
    Join our michaels camera Facebook Support Group for more Photography advice, tips and discussion.
    The Presentation Slides, Notes and all Samples from the Seminar can be found on this Facebook Group.
    / michaelswecanhelp
    Presented by John Warkentin
    Recorded at michaels camera in Melbourne, VIC Australia.
    Video Crew: Brian H and Bill S
    Edited by Asher Floyd
    asherfloyd.com/

Komentáře • 30

  • @jimwlouavl
    @jimwlouavl Před 3 lety +3

    Instant credibility by mentioning the Scheimfplug principle. I’ve watched a dozen or so videos on tilt-shift lenses and this is the first I’ve seen to mention it.

  • @360icon
    @360icon Před 2 lety +1

    This was excellent! I ordered one today and by watching this i learned some proper techniques on the use of something unique

  • @billzidis2656
    @billzidis2656 Před 5 lety +1

    Since I bought my 24mm TS my photography changed...I'm a real estate photographer and helps me alot for detailed shots.Very nice video.Thank you

  • @photocreativity
    @photocreativity Před 2 lety

    Great demonstration of the Tilt Shift lens!👍

  • @yosoli1
    @yosoli1 Před 6 lety +1

    Thanks a lot John, was the best explanation I ever seen and heard about this difficult topic, congratulations!

  • @jarosawsiudzinski5442
    @jarosawsiudzinski5442 Před 8 lety +5

    Great and easy explanation. Thank You a lot.

    • @michaelscamera
      @michaelscamera  Před 7 lety +1

      Our pleasure Jaroslaw. Thanks for letting us know. Best regards, Peter Michael, Managing Director - michaels

  • @sailronin
    @sailronin Před 2 lety

    A very nice demo of tilt/shift lenses and good explanation. A minor correction in terminology, you are NOT bending the plane of focus, you are pivoting the plane of focus. The plane of focus remains a straight plane, just pivoted on it's axis; bending the plane would result in massive distortion like a "fun house" mirror.

  • @alexabadi7458
    @alexabadi7458 Před 2 lety

    Thanks a lot !

  • @businessfotografie
    @businessfotografie Před 6 lety

    Great explanations for this type of lens!

  • @emads5391
    @emads5391 Před 8 lety

    Thank uuu very much , i like ur passion about photography... and it is very informative video too

  • @timthompson1925
    @timthompson1925 Před 5 lety

    thank you so much John!!!

  • @RHarack
    @RHarack Před 4 lety

    great job

  • @karolisvaiciulis691
    @karolisvaiciulis691 Před 4 lety

    This is magic!

  • @SudhakarSinghbondili
    @SudhakarSinghbondili Před 7 lety +1

    very helpful thanking you for sharing

  • @mdturnerinoz
    @mdturnerinoz Před 7 lety

    Thanks for the ideas. I have the Canon 45mm TS and love to video, so I'll give this a try.

    • @michaelscamera
      @michaelscamera  Před 7 lety

      Thanks Marty, we're very pleased that you picked up some ideas from our talk. Best regards, Peter Michael, Managing Director - michaels

  • @gregnorris8279
    @gregnorris8279 Před 3 lety

    The 3 shots is a Vertical Panorama. I have done this using a basic 18-50mm lens on a Nikon D200, years ago. I have it printed at approx 1/2 full size and the result is a 6ft x 1ft mounted vertical panorama of a tree in in a gully. No-one can ever get that shot, as the tree was washed away in annual flooding. Am interested in the tilt shift lens, but think it more for the focus/out of focus possibilities. Great talk though, thanks 👍

  • @mromagnoli
    @mromagnoli Před 6 lety

    The first live-view in a DSLR was in 2000 - the Olympus E-10.

  • @jorismaasvisuals
    @jorismaasvisuals Před 6 lety

    Amazing video and explanation. I only have the Canon 24mm TS-E f3.5L (hopefully I can upgrade to the Mark II this year since it's a lot better when it comes to distortion and it's also sharper). I am also thinking about getting the 45mm since it's a pretty affordable TS lens nowadays.

  • @NealeGray
    @NealeGray Před 6 lety

    I don't get it, sorry. Maybe some diagrams and more examples would help? Sorry for being dumb.

  • @peterhubertus
    @peterhubertus Před 3 lety

    Thanks for your Video, BUT sorry Sir, your statement "it´s difficult, even I don´t understand it" (Scheimpflug) is barely acceptable. Don´t make it more difficult than it is: 1. The object plane, the lens plane and the film plane intersect in ONE intersection line. 2. The lens equation still applies: 1/object distance PLUS 1/film distance EQUAL focal length. Further: the object plane is not bent, it is rotated around the intersection line (s.o.).

  • @stevenkimdmd
    @stevenkimdmd Před 6 lety

    Canon should make tilt-shift adapters for their L lenses. Greedy bastards.

    • @michaelscamera
      @michaelscamera  Před 6 lety +1

      This is not as simple as it sounds. Tilt Shift Lenses need to have very large image circles and an adapter would have to have some thickness to it, and this would act like an extension tube and cause the loss of distant focusing.

    • @RudolfWolph
      @RudolfWolph Před 6 lety

      It *can* work if the flange distance of the camera is shorter than the lens' native mount, as in mirrorless... but then you'd need to use an aps-c camera in order to have a large enough image circle... but I doubt Canon would see much of a market for a tilt-shift adapter for EF lenses to EF-M.

  • @kevin-parratt-artist
    @kevin-parratt-artist Před 2 lety

    1. Tilting the lens bends nothing.
    2. Large format cameras are in production today, both by new start-ups and premium companies such as Arca Swiss, Cambo and Linhof. Linhof in fact produce no fewer than five different 4x5 cameras. You are mouthing off with misinformation. 👎

  • @cluxseltoot
    @cluxseltoot Před 6 lety

    Didn't understand a word.

  • @ams0876
    @ams0876 Před 6 lety

    Lot of technical explanations nothing practical.