Apr 10, 2007, 13:21
I took this shot in a wheat field just off Yilliminning Rd over Easter.
It was taken with an MC Arsat 35mm f/2.8 tilt/shift lens on my Canon 30D.
I was lying on my stomach to get close to the ground, and deliberately set the tilt and lens rotation to give a combination of foreground/background sharp focus while also including obvious out-of-focus areas (I didn't use any shift). The (manual) aperture was set to about f/4, shutter speed was 1/4000th sec, and 100 ISO.
![[Image: ST_IMG_8289.jpg]](http://www.shuttertalk.com/forums/images/upload/ST_IMG_8289.jpg)
I'd be interested to hear some critical opinions of this shot and advice on how else it might have been approached. Or perhaps where an effect such as this is (and isn't) appropriate to use.
I'm really enjoying experimenting with this lens (as you can probably tell by the fact that just about everything I've posted recently has been taken with it). But I know that I can't just rely on the tricks it can provide to give me good shots. I need to learn how (and more importantly when) to use it well, rather than just using it as a gimmick.
Thanks in advance for any advice or opinions you might offer - especially those that challenge my own thinking.
It was taken with an MC Arsat 35mm f/2.8 tilt/shift lens on my Canon 30D.
I was lying on my stomach to get close to the ground, and deliberately set the tilt and lens rotation to give a combination of foreground/background sharp focus while also including obvious out-of-focus areas (I didn't use any shift). The (manual) aperture was set to about f/4, shutter speed was 1/4000th sec, and 100 ISO.
![[Image: ST_IMG_8289.jpg]](http://www.shuttertalk.com/forums/images/upload/ST_IMG_8289.jpg)
I'd be interested to hear some critical opinions of this shot and advice on how else it might have been approached. Or perhaps where an effect such as this is (and isn't) appropriate to use.
I'm really enjoying experimenting with this lens (as you can probably tell by the fact that just about everything I've posted recently has been taken with it). But I know that I can't just rely on the tricks it can provide to give me good shots. I need to learn how (and more importantly when) to use it well, rather than just using it as a gimmick.
Thanks in advance for any advice or opinions you might offer - especially those that challenge my own thinking.
