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Thursday, August 14, 2008
The Swing of Things
Art Adams | 08/14
Using tilt/shift lenses for good instead of evil
Tilt/shift lenses were originally developed to keep objects on a certain plane in focus, in situations where they normally wouldn’t be. For example, if a tabletop shoot required you to carry focus on a large number of food dishes from very close to the lens to quite far away, one solution would be to light the set to T16 or T22 in order to hold focus. Or, using a tilt/shift lens, it would be simpler to use less light and tilt the plane of focus forward to match the plane of the surface the dishes were sitting on. This doesn’t work well for moving shots, but for static shots it works startlingly well.
In my case, though, the goal was to throw objects out of focus that normally wouldn’t be, in order to focus attention to specific areas of the image. This requires doing exactly the opposite of what I described above, which is to tilt the plane of focus away from the plane that you want thrown out of focus:

(courtesy of Wikepedia)
The front and back of the focus plane falls above and below the plane of text, leaving one narrow bit of the text in focus. The lens is tilted up so that the plane of focus falls at a severe angle to the plane of the text. If I wanted the text in focus I would tilt the lens forward, to match the depth-of-field plane to that of the text.
The trick is visualizing the plane of focus in front of the lens, falling where you want it to fall, and then tilting the lens toward that plane to keep it in focus or away from that plane to isolate one section of it.


For my purposes, where I was isolating an object in the frame, I discovered that tilting the lens all the way to one side or the other worked the best. I turned the horizontal adjustment knob until I could see the rear edge of the lens move into the shot, viewed as part of a round black circle, and then I backed off until the black circle just disappeared. This left me with the most extreme plane of focus possible. On longer lenses this gave me a slice of focus that I could move through the shot, one side to the other, using the focus knob. Pulling focus became less about front to back and more about left to right, across the frame.
I had a set of three lenses: a 24mm, a 45mm, and a 90mm. (There’s a 110mm available as well but I didn’t have that on this shoot.) The 24mm wasn’t very useful for isolating objects in the frame because the overall depth-of-field was too great unless I was focusing on a very close object. The 45mm and 90mm gave me a very narrow slice of focus anywhere in frame that I wanted.
Horizontal tilt worked better than vertical tilt alone. Vertical tilt distorted faces by making them wider, limiting me to using horizontal tilt alone on interviews—which was fine, as I was able to create a vertical plane of focus that ran from the subject’s face down their body and dropped off very quickly to the sides. Vertical tilt, which creates a plane of focus running horizontally across the frame, was more useful landscapes. By combining the two of them I was able to rotate the plane of focus to encompass very specific areas of the frame, such as isolating a “Don’t Walk” sign in one corner of the shot while the pedestrians crossing the street in the rest of the frame were completely out of focus.
The best way to view the plane of focus is to turn the peaking in your viewfinder all the way up. As you turn the focus knob you’ll easily see exactly what’s in focus and what isn’t. Be wary, though, of your exposure—peaking makes the area in focus appear brighter and may give the false impression that your slice of focus is brighter than the rest of the image, when it really isn’t.
I didn’t find a lot of use for the lens re-centering option. This moves the optical center of the lens anywhere in the frame and is, in theory, good for straightening converging lines in landscapes or architectural work. I didn’t find it very useful for what I was doing so I didn’t touch it much.
Arri publishes some excellent instructions for using their tilt/shift lenses. If you’re interested in understanding this kind of thing then please do study the following PDF files:
Arri Tilt/Shift Bellows Manual
Arri Tilt Instruction Manual
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Art Adams | 08/30
A directory of my best articles, sorted by topic.
This entry is a guide to my best articles, sorted by topic. Enjoy!
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Jeremiah Karpowicz | 05/25
See why this light is in such high demand
We asked John Gresch, ARRI Vice President of Lighting Products, to tell us more about the products ARRI had to show at NAB 2012 and he gave us some details about the ARRI M40. It…
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Adam Wilt | 05/08
A few cool things I saw at the show that didn’t fit into any other articles.
NAB is too big a show in too short a time to see more than a fraction of it. I’ve covered a few things in some depth (as have other PVC folks), but there’s plenty more that slips by without proper coverage. Here, I have a few photos…
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the best use for this is to get buildings from doing the ” fade to a point” as they go up into the sky…
leave the camera sensor plane parallel with the building front facade
you will only see the first couple stories of building
then raise the lens up until the whole building comes into view
as the lens goes up, more floors will show up…
you will hit a point where the lens starts to vignette on the top…
( which can be a cool effect on its own)
if you can get a lens made for architectural shooting and has a large circle of light on the backside, all the better…
Posted by billS on 08/28 at 11:25 PM
like this
<IMG SRC=“http://www.hidden-ireland.com/images/architectural-heritage-mediaeval-abbeys-and-churches-graphic.jpg”
Posted by billS on 08/28 at 11:29 PM
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