Shooting Medium Format with a Full Frame Camera | Brenizer Method & Bokeh Panorama Tutorial
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- Опубліковано 6 жов 2024
- In this video, Benj talks about shooting and editing composite panoramic photos or "bokeh panoramas" using a technique known as the Brenizer Method, popularized by an amazing NYC wedding photographer named Ryan Brenizer.
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Awesome tutorial!
I never overlay the couple in photos & sometimes my results don’t line up as well so that’s a great tip.
Hey Benj .i was asked to do a wedding 3yrs ago ,didn’t think wedding photography was for me . I came across your work and thought I can do this. (We’ll sort of)So your work inspired me to give it a good crack .ive got 4 weddings this year .so I’m stocked.!its afforded me to get good gear (I wouldn’t be able to afford previous ,I have 3 kids no money) and a holiday for the family and have learnt heaps.So you doing these videos are so generous of you.(gen 20:35) I would like to thank you for this.
Kapai from New Zealand
Thanks for sharing this! I've been following Ryan Brenizer since early Flickr days. I always hesitated to use the technique because of the post processing which wasn't as automated back then as it is now. I'm a huge LR nerd and so this little tutorial and the fact that LR does it pretty much automatically for you has pushed me over the hurdle and I did 3 or 4 at my last wedding. They look great! Thanks for the encouragement to finally try this.
Nice ! This technique is well known since the beginning of photography and many digital photographers reused this technique in the early 2000’s to overcome the lack of larger sensors and pixels. Some of them used 4 digital cameras with the same prime lens and synchronisés the shots to stitch them in pp after. Olympus offers sensor shift now, the final result is a 80mp photo.
Man, you are the best wedding photographer!!
Hey, thanks!
Such a great, simple tutorial! Tried it out with your tips tonight and editing now. 👍🏻
This is freaking sick. Gonna try this out for sureeee
Hey Benj, good job! I learned a lot from you. Keep it up man.
Amazing, Thanks Benj
thank you benj very informative. :)
Hey Benji. Thanks for answering my how to question from a previous video comment. Can’t wait to try this out.
Q: Do you manual focus to prevent focusing on the background as you shoot the grid?
WILD AND STORY curious to focus as well
ah yep! good call. I focus the first frame and then leave it on manual for the rest of the shots.
Thanks. Thought so.
Good luck with the channel. Great content.
if your camera has focus hold, then just keep pressing that as you take the rest of the photos
Nice work. Is there a way to tell LR which photograph of the people is to be pose to be used?
Thanks!
Your gonna kill my hard drive space!
Useful tips.
Thank you very much for the tutorial Benj. I've always liked the idea of the Brenizer method when I'm not shooting medium format, but the thought of going into photoshop just to stitch this up has always prevented me from doing this. Gonna give it a try sometime this week. Do you still use this method nowadays for your paid work?
Yep!
Subbed. Good stuff
Looks like Toys)))
truly its not a A 40mm f/0.6 , but large format sensor (film) equivalent
I Have a EOS R, USING mamiya 645 and pentax 67 lens, how will see the image through?
Which camera did you use for these images?
Do you need to lock focus?
Yep!
A 40mm f/0.6 would have an aperture 66.7mm wide, almost the same as the 85/1.2. It's not physically impossible. If it was, so too would be the 85/1.2!
I see little point in this technique, and have zero interest in it, but it's always interesting to see what people are doing.
Karim Ghantous i think the theoretical limit of aperture speed is f/0.6
@@birkgroven9160 Actually, not quite. For normal glass formulations, it's f/0.5. For exotic materials it can be wider than f/0.25. Of course you have to have the shortest possible flange focal distance.
Karim Ghantous interesting. I stand corrected. Thank you!
Hi, I really liked the comparison near the end to what the same photo would look like if shot directly with one lens. I saw a number of tutorials, but never a nice comparison. I may have missed this: do I need an 85mm lens 1.2 or could I also do it with a 50mm 1.2. I have them both, but rarely take pictures with the heavy 85mm and wouldn't want to carry it to a wedding, if not necessary.
This is way after your comment, but you could theoretically do it with any lens. I'd be careful with anything below a 50 though because then you'll start to get some distortion due to how close you would have to be to your subject.
Tony and Chelsea just ripped you off 😭
I’m definitely not the first person to have done a video about this, it’s ok :)
@@benjhaisch nah man! You're the first person I saw do it I don't care about the others they ripped you!