Great video and now going to watch more. Recently bought a Samyang TS 24mm f3.5 for my Sony a7rii and still learning. This was just what I was looking for. Good old RUclips!
You don’t have parallax issues doing that ? I’ve finally ordered the 24tse and I see here and there to get to frame (like rogeti) to be able to move the camera around the lens and not the opposite. Tks, and great videos!
@@JamesKerwin Thanks for the great video. I was wondering the same thing after watching. When would you see a difference using a Rogeti type frame necessary ?
Nice vid. Really appreciated. Do you think there is no benefit of a nodal head? Seems like a cheap addition for a lot of accuracy and saved time in edit.
Great advice presented honestly and openly. Looks easy, right! - - - Right? Well, we will see how it all turns out in the hands of an amateur like myself. thanks --- Bo
Great video ... If the subject was both tall and wide and needed the lens to be "Shifted" to get the top in, could you use the traditional technique of twisting the whole camera on the tripod head to get the sides in as well?
For sure it would not join together very well. Any shift involving the sensor moving to subject (in architectural images) would make difficult to join.
Very informative. I have been using the Canon TS-E 24mm for pano. In your examples landscape panos are shot with camera in portrait orientation and portrait pano is done with camera in landscape. That makes complete sense and yields the best use of the sensor, Thanks. With bracketing I'll be processing in Lightroom Classic using Photo Merge > HDR Panorama and I hope that works. Great video and Thank You
@@JamesKerwin Watching "The Importance of Slowing Down & Lining Up - Architecture Photography" and setting up a pano + bracket shot in my living room at this moment. Right or wrong I am doing panos using left-to-right + up and down and the diaganols to get 18 images, very chubby files :)
Hi here, great learning in your videos, thank you very much. Just a question, what is (or was) the aperture when you were shooting these images? I presume in order to maintain the sharpness across each of the shot images, it had to be a higher number, over F10 and so on perhaps?
¡Master! Questions: 1. Does each shot have a different focus or do all three shots focus in the same place? 2. Do you use manual focus? Great photos! Thank you. P.S.: I ask because I do not speak English and I do not fully understand what you say in the video. Many things I have to guess.
Hello - Thank you for watching. Focus depends on the scene - but for me if it is a landscape orientation image - focus on the same - if it is a portrait orientation, perhaps on the top, the middle and then foreground. All tilt-shift lenses are manual focus.
Cool video, liked & subscribed ● If only using same lens very often, learn that one lens hyperfocal distancing point. 1/3rd focusing is less accurate. •Hyperfocal is easy to test for.
This is a photo Sanatorium "Iveria" in Tskhaltubo . The sanatorium is being completely stripped at this moment. Work to transform this building into a hotel has recently started.
Thank you all clear
Thanks Derek
Great video. Going to watch the others now.
Very useful video, simple and practical, thank you
Pleasure
THX so much - love your work!
Nice work and very well explained.
Great video and now going to watch more. Recently bought a Samyang TS 24mm f3.5 for my Sony a7rii and still learning. This was just what I was looking for. Good old RUclips!
Hey John - check out my video coming out this Sunday at 5pm UK time. ;-) TS in action again!
You don’t have parallax issues doing that ? I’ve finally ordered the 24tse and I see here and there to get to frame (like rogeti) to be able to move the camera around the lens and not the opposite. Tks, and great videos!
Not when architecture is at that distance away.
@@JamesKerwin Thanks for the great video. I was wondering the same thing after watching. When would you see a difference using a Rogeti type frame necessary ?
Very nice images!!!
Many thanks!
Nice vid. Really appreciated. Do you think there is no benefit of a nodal head? Seems like a cheap addition for a lot of accuracy and saved time in edit.
Great advice presented honestly and openly.
Looks easy, right! - - - Right?
Well, we will see how it all turns out in the hands of an amateur like myself.
thanks --- Bo
Cheers for watching! Nice to see you here. Be great to see your results... take care!
Great video ...
If the subject was both tall and wide and needed the lens to be "Shifted" to get the top in, could you use the traditional technique of twisting the whole camera on the tripod head to get the sides in as well?
For sure it would not join together very well. Any shift involving the sensor moving to subject (in architectural images) would make difficult to join.
@@JamesKerwin Thanks James, so it's a case of deciding which way you want, Tall OR Wide ... 🙂
hi james love your videos,be hind the scenes great ,watching you work seen in viewfinder very inspiring thanks more please, rob
More coming - sorry, I had some horrible life events that had to take over.
Great video as always!I wish a large audience a lot of subscribers
Got to keep fighting. :) Thanks for watching.
Very informative. I have been using the Canon TS-E 24mm for pano. In your examples landscape panos are shot with camera in portrait orientation and portrait pano is done with camera in landscape. That makes complete sense and yields the best use of the sensor, Thanks. With bracketing I'll be processing in Lightroom Classic using Photo Merge > HDR Panorama and I hope that works. Great video and Thank You
Yeah for sure. And your lightroom combination is spot on for most things.
@@JamesKerwin Watching "The Importance of Slowing Down & Lining Up - Architecture Photography" and setting up a pano + bracket shot in my living room at this moment. Right or wrong I am doing panos using left-to-right + up and down and the diaganols to get 18 images, very chubby files :)
Nice job, I would like tos ask you about the ISO 6400 limit of the 5ds r, is that a problem? How do you deal whith it in dark interiors. Thanks.
Yes. Most shots for interiors are on a tripod with ISO 100-400 Maximum for sure.
Hi here, great learning in your videos, thank you very much. Just a question, what is (or was) the aperture when you were shooting these images? I presume in order to maintain the sharpness across each of the shot images, it had to be a higher number, over F10 and so on perhaps?
Hey! Usually with my lens. Both the 24 and 17mm TS are sharpest at f7.1-f9. So mostly this range.
¡Master!
Questions:
1. Does each shot have a different focus or do all three shots focus in the same place?
2. Do you use manual focus?
Great photos!
Thank you.
P.S.: I ask because I do not speak English and I do not fully understand what you say in the video.
Many things I have to guess.
Hello - Thank you for watching. Focus depends on the scene - but for me if it is a landscape orientation image - focus on the same - if it is a portrait orientation, perhaps on the top, the middle and then foreground. All tilt-shift lenses are manual focus.
@@JamesKerwin
Thank you, thank you very much.
So, if you shoot with a 50 megapixel camera and you do a 3 shot pano with the tilt shift lens, what size would the picture be?
Can be anywhere from 70-130 depending on how much you crop. But on cropped - huge and in most cases not needed of course. 😊
Panoramic photography depends on overlaps for 'seamless stitching', this is usually a 1/4 or larger 1/3 extreme
Cool video, liked & subscribed
● If only using same lens very often, learn that one lens hyperfocal distancing point. 1/3rd focusing is less accurate.
•Hyperfocal is easy to test for.
Yes exactly 💯 90cm on the 17mm tse.
Was that the dance studio . Ballroom at the end?
Dance studio? Never shot a dance studio. Sorry.
@@JamesKerwin ill have to look at the video from a few months ago , give me a few
This is a photo Sanatorium "Iveria" in Tskhaltubo . The sanatorium is being completely stripped at this moment. Work to transform this building into a hotel has recently started.
@@GaryGold correct. Its in my video from 2018 as well. The hall shot is another place.
@@JamesKerwin Ok
nice, looking forward to the post-editing video!
Yep - that one is coming up on Sunday - to stitch these together. should be up 10pm Tbilisi time, 8pm German and 7pm UK.