The Brenizer Method! (The Easy Way)

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  • Опубликовано: 19 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 19

  • @bwloawesome
    @bwloawesome 2 года назад +7

    Why not merge the photos first then edit? That gives you 1) the same consistent editing in your prior method 2) lets you edit lightscape if needed afterwards if needed. Seeing that you edited a bit after the merge anyway, won't that just save a bit of time on the workflow?

  • @karikaru
    @karikaru Год назад

    Learned a few new things about Lightroom in addition to the method, great tutorial!

  • @bikuda
    @bikuda 2 года назад

    Gracias por tu generosidad y tiempo from Puerto Vallarta

  • @samanthak2205
    @samanthak2205 3 года назад

    I’m so excited to do this at my wedding tomorrow!

  • @ric6876
    @ric6876 4 года назад +1

    Nice Video! Will Definitely try this on my upcoming Engagement session! Keep Sharing man!

  • @igormisovski5049
    @igormisovski5049 2 года назад

    helloo which preset is use for this picture?
    tnxxx

  • @jamescase1616
    @jamescase1616 4 года назад +1

    Hey! Spotted the file type - you back to Nikon - or an old old snap - thought you had moved to Sony? PS So helpful tutorial!!

    • @Anchorandveilphotography
      @Anchorandveilphotography  4 года назад

      hey man! NO, I made this couple of years ago but decided to shorten and re-upload it!

  • @Lenkramarae
    @Lenkramarae 3 года назад

    What app are you using? Great help

  • @GulagExpress1
    @GulagExpress1 3 года назад

    not that it significantly matters as far as the amount of work goes, but why do you synch the setting for all the individual photographs, instead of just synching it once with the fully merged one?

    • @djinsect
      @djinsect 2 года назад +2

      One reason you want to do it this way is if you have to clean up vignette or any barrel distortion from the lens. If you leave those in, the dark corners and repeated distortion pattern make it more obvious that it's a composite of several images and it can ruin the effect.

  • @ryanlovelock3024
    @ryanlovelock3024 Год назад

    Why shoot at 1/1600 with an ISO of 800?
    Seems you could have dropped that ISO way down with a slower shutter?

    • @maldridge7630
      @maldridge7630 Год назад

      Handheld, that's why, I am sure 🤔

  • @MrSimonj1970
    @MrSimonj1970 Год назад +1

    That's not Brenizer Method at all - it's just a pano stitch. BM is about using shallow DOF to mimic larger format cameras.

    • @Devin.robinson1
      @Devin.robinson1 Год назад

      Hahaha. I know Ryan and this is how he taught it to me. We used to have to export jpgs and use a 3rd party app before photoshop and Lightroom built it in. 😂🤣

    • @MrSimonj1970
      @MrSimonj1970 Год назад

      ​@@Devin.robinson1 I've seen him describe it videos several times, and the wiki confirms it:
      "The Brenizer Method, sometimes referred to as Bokeh Panorama or Bokehrama, is a photographic technique characterized by the creation of a digital image exhibiting a shallow depth of field in tandem with a wide angle of view."

  • @4791_
    @4791_ 3 года назад +1

    You forgot to tell viewers to switch to manual focus after the initial single point focus of the couple.

    • @Anchorandveilphotography
      @Anchorandveilphotography  3 года назад +1

      I don’t switch to manual focus. I use back button focus so it doesn’t focus when I press the shutter