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  <id>urn:memiki:edouard:art:Photography:It-s-a-small-world-after-all-that-frame-tilting:note-476</id>
  <title>It's a small world after all that frame tilting</title>
  <updated>2010-01-15T12:03:08Z</updated>
  <entry>
    <id>urn:edouard:art:Photography:It-s-a-small-world-after-all-that-frame-tilting:note-476</id>
    <title>Note body</title>
    <author>
      <name>edouard</name>
    </author>
    <updated>2007-04-09T17:49:37Z</updated>
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<p><strong>How To Make Anything Look Like a Toy</strong></p>


	<p>In artist <a href="http://www.photography-now.com/artists/K06095.html"><strong>Olivo Barbieri</strong></a> &#8217;s photographs, the six-acre Roman Colosseum resembles an upside-down soda cap, Las Vegas and Rome look like model-train landscapes, and an 80,000-ton boat seems as if a child could pluck it from the water.</p>


	<p><img src="http://discovermagazine.com/2006/jul/toys/tinyboat.jpg" alt="" /></p>


	<p><img src="http://4.bp.blogspot.com/_VDvPKFlYKJQ/SdJH5Vc-BjI/AAAAAAAAAjY/6hT9v0WHTJU/s400/barbieri+img_103.jpg" alt="" /></p>


	<p><img src="http://discovermagazine.com/2006/jul/toys/tinycolosseum.jpg" alt="" /><br />copyright &#169; Olivo Barbieri</p>


	<p><em>It&#8217;s often hard to convince people that Olivo Barbieri&#8217;s aerial photographs are real!</em></p>


	<p>To create this effect, Barbieri uses a tilt-frame camera to <strong>shift the plane of focus</strong> so that it is out of alignment with the film. Normally, this allows wide-angle aerial views to be captured in proper perspective. But used incorrectly, an optical illusion occurs.</p>


	<p><strong><a href="http://www.discover.com/issues/jul-06/rd/toys/">http://www.discover.com/issues/jul-06/rd/toys</a></strong></p>


	<p>Japanese photographer <a href="http://www.jewcy.com/daily_shvitz/small_world"><strong>Naoki Honjo</strong></a> (and now <a href="http://www.cheapshooter.com/2007/08/24/tilt-shift-photography-its-a-small-world-after-all/">many others</a>!) uses the same technique
<img src="http://www.jewcy.com/files/images/NHswimmingpool.preview.jpg" alt="" width="400"/></p>


	<p>Gimmicky? but really cool!</p>


	<p>Could we do the same with a simple shift/tilt lense ?<br />e.g. for my ukrainian &#8216;Hasselblad&#8217; (<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kiev-Arsenal">Kiev 88cm</a>):<br /> <a href="http://www.kievcamera.com/product.php?ID=175">http://www.kievcamera.com/product.php?ID=175</a></p>      </div>
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