On 14/10/06, graywolf <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Also, for landscape work. That is how you get everything from the blades
> of grass in front of the camera to the mountains in the background
> sharp. Folks ought to read a good book on view camera techniques just so
> they will know what can be done, even if they have no interest in doing
> it themselves. A tilt shift lens gives you the movements of a press
> camera (front only), not those of a full view camera which has front and
> back movements. As for Photoshop, a kludge is better than nothing, but
> it ain't the real thing.

On static subjects a combination of image combining (can secure
infinite DOF at wide open apertures if required and/or ultra-wide
latitude) and multi-row image stitching of even relatively low res
digi shots will even put LF in the shade now. Granted the it's tedious
to do manually but there are some really nice automation kits out
there for serious work.

http://www.peaceriverstudios.com/pixorb/index.html
http://www.roundshot-deutschland.de/english/karline_rodeon_modular.html


-- 
Rob Studdert
HURSTVILLE AUSTRALIA
Tel +61-2-9554-4110
UTC(GMT)  +10 Hours
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://home.swiftdsl.com.au/~distudio//publications/
Pentax user since 1986, PDMLer since 1998

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