These videos are incredible and I feel if I had this sort of learning earlier in my photography journey I would have focussed more on the art of photography and less on gear and other peripheral things. Your work is inspirational!
What a creative job boss, I would love ❤️ to visit you some day, very very expensive equipment, I can't effort, second thing I have to learn how to use software, for that's only I need at least one year Love ❤️ your job, no one have a video on UA-cam like you've Thanks a lot
thank you for the fantastic tutorial from start to finish very instructive, I'm already looking forward to the next one, I'm definitely going to try this greetings from Belgium
I really love your in depth teachings. I’m more into portrait photography but your videos got me interested into product photography just because you explain the process so well.
I am always impressed by your videos. A lot of care to produce the perfect shot, a minimum of post-production and the result is perfect. One of the very few channels where AI is not used (thankfully). I'm not a photographer but I love following your videos. Compliments
Thank you for taking the time to make these instructive and masterful videos on photographic techniques. Greatly appreciated and I hope you'll continue! And in the future maybe you could comment/illustrate the effect on depth of field with a tilted plane camera. (Schiempflug and all that.) I thought you were going to go there in this video with the use of a tilt-shift lens, but you seem to have relied on larger f-nos for DOF control.
You could do this with a relatively small speed light, flash gun, maybe something from Godox. Not sure if they’re available from Amazon probably. Thanks for watching.
Many thanks for your tutorials, would it be possible to do something similar with tilting the camera on the tripod or do you need that specilist lens? love the composition.
The distortion is almost entirely down to the view point of the lens, so yes it would be similar with a standard wide lens. However, without the tilt function the depth of field would be very limited. Thanks for watching.
Instead of f22, why not use the old LF camera method of "Focus on near, tilt on far", that should have gotten your image more or less tack sharp, maybe having to go to f11 at most.
thank you for another great breakdown
Very welcome
These videos are incredible and I feel if I had this sort of learning earlier in my photography journey I would have focussed more on the art of photography and less on gear and other peripheral things. Your work is inspirational!
Glad you like the videos. Thank you for your comment and thanks for watching.
Great . Thank you very much for teaching all the techniques. Have a nice time.
Thank you! You too!
Many thanks for sharing all your knowledge and expertise!!!
Glad it was helpful!
What a creative job boss, I would love ❤️ to visit you some day, very very expensive equipment, I can't effort, second thing I have to learn how to use software, for that's only I need at least one year
Love ❤️ your job, no one have a video on UA-cam like you've
Thanks a lot
Thank you for your kind words.
thank you for the fantastic tutorial from start to finish very instructive, I'm already looking forward to the next one, I'm definitely going to try this greetings from Belgium
Glad it was helpful!
I really love your in depth teachings. I’m more into portrait photography but your videos got me interested into product photography just because you explain the process so well.
Thank you, all the principles and the science of light are the same, try using these techniques on your portraiture.
Great tutorial, thanks very much for sharing!
Glad you enjoyed it!
I am always impressed by your videos.
A lot of care to produce the perfect shot, a minimum of post-production and the result is perfect.
One of the very few channels where AI is not used (thankfully).
I'm not a photographer but I love following your videos.
Compliments
Thanks for watching.
Thank you for taking the time to make these instructive and masterful videos on photographic techniques. Greatly appreciated and I hope you'll continue! And in the future maybe you could comment/illustrate the effect on depth of field with a tilted plane camera. (Schiempflug and all that.) I thought you were going to go there in this video with the use of a tilt-shift lens, but you seem to have relied on larger f-nos for DOF control.
A bit of both actually, thanks for watching
Illustrating the impact on DOF for both tilted sensor planes and f-nos would be of interest.@@CameraClubLive
Really interesting, thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Brilliant, what flash would you recommend i start off with to get photos like this. Can I get one from Amazon?
You could do this with a relatively small speed light, flash gun, maybe something from Godox. Not sure if they’re available from Amazon probably. Thanks for watching.
Many thanks for your tutorials, would it be possible to do something similar with tilting the camera on the tripod or do you need that specilist lens? love the composition.
The distortion is almost entirely down to the view point of the lens, so yes it would be similar with a standard wide lens. However, without the tilt function the depth of field would be very limited.
Thanks for watching.
Another great lesson :). Would this work with a normal 24mm lens, if the subject were parallel with lens/sensor? :)
Yes, absolutely
Thanks for watching
Great video, as always. Could the depth of field be created with focus stacking? Shift lenses can be quite expensive!
Probably yes, or you could change the orientation / composition and use an even smaller aperture.
Instead of f22, why not use the old LF camera method of "Focus on near, tilt on far", that should have gotten your image more or less tack sharp, maybe having to go to f11 at most.
Thanks for the comment, it will help grow my UA-cam channel.
Thanks for watching