Toy birthplace: urban landscapes of Russia in the lens tilt-shift
Amateur photographers often experiment with different shooting modes to get unusual shots. One of these techniques is called tilt-shift: it is the use of a special lens that allows you to adjust the tilt of the optical axis.
Due to the shift of the optical axis is easier to control the future, and to simulate the effect of macro photography, getting in center of frame spot of field. Due to decreasing the sharpness of the edges of the frame composition is perceived as a model: the vision focuses on small objects in the center, eroding all that remains out of focus.
In the hands of skilled photographers such optical reception turns any landscape into a toy scene.
Moscow. Photo: VK
Vyborg. Photo: titkova/flickr
Saint Petersburg. Photo: Sergey Ponomarev/flickr
Vladikavkaz. Photo: photomoto007/flickr
Tver. Photo: Maksim Shkolnikov/500px.com
Moscow. Photo: Ilia Musaelov/flickr
Yekaterinburg. Photo: Andrew Starkov/flickr
Orenburg. Photo: muzhchina/flickr
Moscow. Photo: Alexander Gorshkov/flickr
Kaluga. Photo: Daniel Volkhonsky/flickr
Moscow. Photo: Igor Zabotin/flickr
Moscow. Photo: VK
Smolensk. Photo: VK
Smolensk. Photo: VK
Belgorod. Photo: Dmitry Pelepets/flickr
Samara. Photo: Yuri Shlerin/500px.com
Yekaterinburg. Photo: Kirill Sobolev/500px.com
Moscow. Photo: Alexander Sorokopud/500px.com
Moscow. Photo: Leonid Maslov/500px.com
Murmansk. Photo: Dmitry Sovyak/flickr
Keywords: Russian Federation | Macro photography | Exhibition | Tilt-shift | Landscapes | Photographers | Photo | Photography | City