> Of course, these kinds of things are for a studied, formal approach
> to architectural photography and have some serious limitations on
> their applicability.

Geo Lepp makes good use of his Canon tilt shift lenses in his landscape 
photography. With the proper subject he gets both the foreground & the 
distant subject in sharp focus.

Kenneth Waller

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Godfrey DiGiorgi" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: A Tilt- Shift Adapter?


>
> On Dec 10, 2006, at 7:45 PM, Beaker wrote:
>
>> Anyone think a "tilt-shift adapter" that fit between a SLR and 645
>> lens would be practical? (Wide lenses and leaning spires got me
>> thinking about it.) The MF lens circle would lend a fair amount of
>> movement. According to a lens registration chart I found, an adapter
>> would have to be 25.41 mm deep to allow the lens to focus properly.
>> Enough room for the mecanism?
>
> There are bag-bellows lens mounts for various DSLR/35mm SLR cameras
> that accept medium and large format lenses for this purpose. They
> have a limited but enthusiastic following.
>
> Of course, these kinds of things are for a studied, formal approach
> to architectural photography and have some serious limitations on
> their applicability. The biggest issue is that the lenses available
> are rarely of a focal length that can allow much field of view for
> miniature formats like 24x36 and 16x24mm.
>
> As Paul said, you'll get more mileage out of learning how to use the
> software perspective correction tools in Photoshop and other image
> processing tools ...
>
> Godfrey
>
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