1/14/2024 0 Comments Tiltshift band![]() The one feature that I would have liked to have seen is a curves control. There are many mediocre and just plain bad ones, which I didn’t include in this piece. Three apps do tilt-shift very well – TiltShift by Imimux, Tilt Shift Video by Fidel Lainez, and Tilt Shift Generator by Art & Mobile. Tilt-shifting is really a simple concept – define a narrow band of focus, and apply a high-quality blur gradient to the remainder, add saturation and curves, and there you have it. Tilt Shift FocusĬons: A cropping tool would be a nice addition can’t export to social media. Should present you with a preview image, then allow you to save, or go back. Once the focus band is in place (the last step) you can’t go back to change it if you aren’t happy with it’s placement – it simply saves the image. Can’t export directly to Facebook, Mail, etc. Control brightness, contrast, vignette, saturation, blur amount and smoothing (blur gradient).Ĭons: Interface needs to be polished lacks that professional look. Pros: Very adjustable focus band – can tilt and taper, change shape from a bar to circle or elliptical. The video portion of this app will be reviewed in my next article about Tilt Shift Video apps. ![]() Primarily meant for video obviously, Tiltshift Video also does a great job with photos. Save to Camera Roll.Ĭons: Focus band can’t be set to an angle, or tapered. Adjust where the focus band is to be placed, set blur, contrast and saturation. Pros: Load photos from your camera roll (not available in free version), or take a new one with their camera. Well done, complete package – except perhaps for a more adjustable focus band. So let me give you a run down on the photo tilt-shift apps out there, and you can have even more phone on your phone. Even more mind-blowing is you can post-process videos into tilt shift movies! What’s next Apple, weather modeling?! Turns out there ARE apps out there – and good ones – that let you do just that. Jeez, too bad you can’t take a photo on the iPhone, and just tilt-shift it right there, but that would take too much horsepower, and that’s asking a lot of a phone. Saturation levels are increased, and curves are curved, and sometimes the blur isn’t where you want it in the photo, which means you start over again. When I first started tilt-shifting photos, they were done in Photoshop with some fairly horsepower-intensive filters, such as blurring on a gradient. ![]() Is it my Nikon? No but in many ways, I have more fun with the iPhone camera than my Nikon.Īt my blog,, I deal only in the photographic effect of tilt-shift, that is, making real world photos appear as though they are photos of miniature subjects (tilt shift lenses are also used for controlling perspective). The reason is, because I’m a photographer, and thanks to the iPhone, I always have a decent camera with me where ever I go. Pacemaker? I can live without it iPhone, no. I’m talking of course, about the iPhone, Apple’s juggernaut in the the smart phone world, the electronic gadget I can’t live without. It seems that about the only thing it can’t do is brew coffee but there will be a new model out in a few months, and if it has a coffee brewer, I’ll marry it. Check out his previous Introduction to Tilt-Shift Photography which is Part 1 of this series. ![]() A Guest post by Patrick Ashley from Tiltshiftable.
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