Photography tips - How to master the Brenizer Technique

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  • Опубликовано: 2 окт 2024
  • Discover a surprisingly easy camera and editing technique that will allow you to create a very shallow depth-of-field when using a wide-angle lens in this exclusive Practical Photography video.
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Комментарии • 100

  • @countskippy
    @countskippy 8 лет назад +7

    Sweet chest hair microphone. Really controls those harmonics, reduces random noise, AND gets all the ladies.

  • @glsracer
    @glsracer 4 года назад

    Two of my favorite things in one video, cameras and Volvos.

  • @TheUltimateBlooper
    @TheUltimateBlooper 6 лет назад +13

    0:22 - stitching errors on the car... (bonnet, front door, road, etc)
    Probably because when taking images for panoramas (as Brenizer is,essentially, a panorama) - you need to rotate the camera around the nodal point of the lens, not move it around like shown in the example here...

    • @patricksmith2553
      @patricksmith2553 5 лет назад

      Yes, thats why a Tilt/Shift lens would have been very useful for this!

    • @christophschumacher637
      @christophschumacher637 4 года назад

      All you need is a nodal point adapter. this helps to avoid those errors. These errors sre actually kind of shooting errors, caused by shifting the perspective. Those foreground/background errors are hard to correct via software, so better invest in a good nodal poont bracket.

  • @solwanderer3708
    @solwanderer3708 8 лет назад +24

    Great video, but check out at time marker 6:40, something shadowy moves from behind you, then off to the right. Could be nothing, but thought you could investigate.

    • @TechInspected
      @TechInspected 8 лет назад +1

      Freaky!

    • @ppmagazine
      @ppmagazine  8 лет назад +43

      Thanks for this - well make sure we pass it onto our sister magazine "Practical Poltergeists" with high importance.

    • @unrealdt7493
      @unrealdt7493 8 лет назад +6

      Just a bug in front of the lens.

    • @rockporttwentyseven
      @rockporttwentyseven 8 лет назад +2

      holy goosebumps

    • @dreww5854
      @dreww5854 6 лет назад +1

      probably a tiny bug skittering across the lens

  • @JMCote112
    @JMCote112 8 лет назад

    I'm just amazed at Photoshop's ability to merge those photos so quickly and seamlessly. Oh if I only had money to purchase a quality camera.

    • @therealmrben808
      @therealmrben808 7 лет назад +1

      you would be surprised what you can do with a 500 dollar camera it's more about knowing how to get the most from what you got then just trying to throw money at it and hoping for the best

  • @therealmrben808
    @therealmrben808 7 лет назад +6

    I have not read the other comments yet but don't forget to set a white balance as well if you have it in auto mode it may cause issues

  • @dektarium
    @dektarium 6 лет назад +2

    I watched at least 7 videos showing this method and this is the first one that actually explains the technique, particularly the most important aspect, which is that you should shoot your subject from a much closer distance (thus creating a shallow dof in addition to using a wide aperture) and that the stitching is what produces the illusion of having taken the photograph from much farther away. Even Brenizer's video in the B&H page does not explain this key aspect! Thank you for doing a better job than the "inventor" of the technique.

  • @lightonthelandscape
    @lightonthelandscape 7 лет назад +4

    Thanks for the tutorial - very interesting. One question: did you re-save the adjusted RAW files as JPEGS? I noticed your Brenizer folder contained jpegs. Also, would it be better to use a tripod and move the camera from one point rather than from your hips? Does that make a difference?

    • @tosvus
      @tosvus 7 лет назад

      Yes, I was wondering the same thing. (about Jpegs). It'd probably be better to use a tripod, especially since some of these especially at slow shutter speeds, but I think he wanted to show how quickly this can be done. It's an interesting technique though I didn't think the background was all that blurred out. I wonder on FF with a really fast lens if you can get close without having to do this. Have to try I guess.

  • @VE3NMW
    @VE3NMW 6 лет назад

    Thank you for the info.

  • @CVCC
    @CVCC 8 лет назад

    great video's keep making them

  • @tomstromar7295
    @tomstromar7295 8 лет назад

    Great Video - thank you for making it :)

  • @MrTanker10a
    @MrTanker10a 7 лет назад +2

    Excellent tutorial...But the video does not do the Rendering any justice...Since the Headlight is the main subject and the car is white; it's very difficult to see the full effect.
    But, demonstrating and explaining its simplicity make it worthwhile practicing this shot for anyone's photography gearbag...Cheers!

  • @regbaron
    @regbaron 3 года назад

    So your source files were Jpg.🤔

  • @butchpouka
    @butchpouka 8 лет назад

    great tutorial thank you, one question files appeared in ps as jpg should we shoot raw or jpg to process and stitch 40 pics ?

  • @Ethan5777
    @Ethan5777 7 лет назад

    great vid

  • @liambluck3837
    @liambluck3837 8 лет назад

    just out of curiosity but didn't David Hockney do this twenty years before???

  • @gaganmeenunayyar87
    @gaganmeenunayyar87 8 лет назад

    hi i am from City Ludhiana State Punjab Country India....having canon 6d with 24-105mm &50mm prime lens...need training

    • @clickred
      @clickred 8 лет назад +7

      Go out and shoot.

    • @KuopassaTv
      @KuopassaTv 8 лет назад

      That's basically it. :-D

  • @ArnsteinBjone
    @ArnsteinBjone 5 лет назад +2

    This technique will produce images that are OK for low resolution web presentations, but not when you want/need accurate stitching (including the often extreme warping needed for each image).
    The so called "Brenzier technique" is nothing else than a multirow panorama. To be fair, Brenzier himself didn't come up with that name. Someone else did, believing this was something new, "invented" by Brenzier.
    When shooting panoramas, it is important to rotate your lens/camera around its NPP (no-parallax-point*), especially when you use relatively short focal lengths and/or close foreground.
    For those gigapixelpanorames you see around, shot with telephoto lenses and long distance to closest object, this is not important.
    9 images (e.g. 3 rows, 3 columns) will often be enough, depending on various parameters/needs.

    I use a Leofoto LEP-02 for my panoramas, which I stitch with PTGui.
    *) NPP (No-parallax-point) is not the same as the lens' nodal points. (wiki.panotools.org/No-parallax_point)

  • @GRJCLyon
    @GRJCLyon 7 лет назад +1

    I've researched his method and he recommends using a longer prime to get more compression and a better effect. I'm surprised by the 35mm lens here. I'm wondering if just shooting the car at different spots in focus multiple times and photo stacking would produce the same results. Interesting.

    • @tosvus
      @tosvus 7 лет назад

      Yes, that would be an interesting experiment. Panasonic has auto focus stacking in camera on some of their models (plus it saves them as individual files as well). Instead of using those to get everything in focus, I would think it could be used to get stuff more out of focus..

  • @malsbestpal
    @malsbestpal 7 лет назад +3

    Handheld at 1/8th of a sec.... no tripod? Really?

    • @TheUltimateBlooper
      @TheUltimateBlooper 6 лет назад

      Can do that with any IS lens... Or if the body has IBIS.

    • @fasza2mobile
      @fasza2mobile 6 лет назад +1

      Which it was neither. The X-pro 1 doesn't have IBIS nor does the 35mm f/1.4 have IS. That being said the shutter speed set in the video was 1/500 s which is more than sufficient to freeze a stationary subject.

  • @patrickinator789
    @patrickinator789 4 года назад +1

    wakerley woods?

  • @FastAkira
    @FastAkira 8 лет назад +5

    is it much different from using just one pic at 1.4 with a wide angle lense?

    • @TomCooper
      @TomCooper 7 лет назад +3

      FastAkira like so many things, the best way to tell is to try it.

    • @rokzabukovec4685
      @rokzabukovec4685 6 лет назад

      Its different. A lot. You cant get that much of bokeh in a wide shot no matter how open your apeture is.

  • @player5r764
    @player5r764 8 лет назад

    SET THE WHITE BALANCE!!!!!, so it dosnt change between shots!! also ive used this for ages on APS-C. Use a 50mm at least, if youve got an 85 even better. if full frame, try and using an 85 1.4 as a min.

  • @serggc
    @serggc 8 лет назад

    hello, would the distortion be to visible with a f1.8 18-35mm lens and aps-c sensor? I take a lot of architecture pictures and sometimes it's hard to get a whole building in one picture. is there a way to correct the visual distortion after?

  • @TNMYcFan182
    @TNMYcFan182 8 лет назад

    Amazing video! I really wanna go out and try this! Question though, Does this have to be used for say car photos or could it be used for other subjects as well? Not sure if that's a dumb question or not lol.

  • @alexshabotenko7228
    @alexshabotenko7228 7 лет назад

    Thank you for the tutorial, very interesting. I will try it next time I am out shooting. But you know, closer to the middle I started marking every time you said 'rweeeellly rweeeellly' :D

  • @MusicalEditzwithIzzie
    @MusicalEditzwithIzzie 8 лет назад

    Can i stitch together using Photoshop Elements 14? Great video By the way :)

  • @banarne71
    @banarne71 8 лет назад +1

    Hi! Does this work in Photoshop Elements?

    • @lylestavast7652
      @lylestavast7652 5 лет назад

      helpx.adobe.com/photoshop-elements/using/stitching-together-panoramas.html

  • @liamriley9816
    @liamriley9816 8 лет назад

    Tele lenses like a 70-200mm would work much better for this.

  • @MileyonDisney
    @MileyonDisney 6 лет назад

    The car is brighter than the sky, since you want to talk about changing exposure.

  • @AlGreenLightThroughGlass
    @AlGreenLightThroughGlass 8 лет назад

    Nice car, nice camera and interesting technique.

  • @rinx4578
    @rinx4578 7 лет назад

    what shadow is that on 6:39 at the right side of the video

  • @JonathanHsu92
    @JonathanHsu92 8 лет назад

    Awesome video! When you're taking the shots, how much overlap do you want in each picture?

    • @lylestavast7652
      @lylestavast7652 5 лет назад

      about 1/3 on each affected side. better to collect too many than too few - lots of image gets cropped on the periphery if you're not super consistent in your rows and columns...

  • @FarazAzhar
    @FarazAzhar 8 лет назад

    You really really love to say really. Really.

  • @RR-nw9fq
    @RR-nw9fq 8 лет назад

    what camara did u use to shoot this video

  • @iamrichlol
    @iamrichlol 7 лет назад

    Excellent! Can't wait to try this out

  • @hesamjafari9738
    @hesamjafari9738 7 лет назад

    Simple and easy tutorial...thanks

  • @silvestarsohshang9093
    @silvestarsohshang9093 6 лет назад

    Will it work for landscape

  • @beachbum4691
    @beachbum4691 5 лет назад

    Thank you, You don't need lots of Videos, but you do need "arse-kicking-impact" re-what you post ? "BRILLIANT"/// Again Thank you :)

  • @novak06031991
    @novak06031991 8 лет назад

    Can't wait to try it out. Thanks for this.

  • @meme4one
    @meme4one 8 лет назад

    Thanks, thats a new one to try!

  • @HTech123
    @HTech123 8 лет назад

    Really really?

  • @airb1976
    @airb1976 7 лет назад +8

    I read an interesting story about the brenizer method. This technique was used and known for years by other photographers. In 2007 a photographer named daniel buck described this technique in the well known fred miranda forum. One year later ryan brenizer 'invented' this technique. He also suggested to use the name 'brenizer method'. Many photographers at this time dont liked him because of that not very gentleman like behaviour. I think that the credit of ryan brenizer is just that he made this old technique popular

    • @AnttiPah1
      @AnttiPah1 7 лет назад +3

      He himself called this bokeh-panorama, and made it famous in wedding-scene. After that, people started to call it Brenizer method. He did not.

    • @MileyonDisney
      @MileyonDisney 6 лет назад +1

      Airb 19 - Your information is incorrect. Maybe look for other sources.

  • @smokey267
    @smokey267 8 лет назад

    This technique would work better if you used a larger sensor camera and a more tele lens. that way you won't have that wide angle distorted look but still have the same kind of image.

    • @Poppaneedsanap
      @Poppaneedsanap 8 лет назад +1

      The distortion is due to the relative distance from the subject to sensor.. doing this technique with a 200mm from the same spot would yield the same results, but would take 8x as many pics. If you moved back to capture the whole scene in 40 shots with a tele lens then the results would appear to be less wide, and less distorted.

    • @smokey267
      @smokey267 8 лет назад

      ***** To clarify, you're agreeing with me? Your second point was basically what I was suggesting.

    • @Poppaneedsanap
      @Poppaneedsanap 8 лет назад +2

      yup, agreeing.. he could have gotten less distortion even with the 50mm by backing up and tiling less. I think the point of this thing though was to have a wide angle shot with a really narrow depth of field, which is tough to do in camera

  • @NicholasEJones
    @NicholasEJones 8 лет назад

    Really Good

  • @LaurentLamy
    @LaurentLamy 8 лет назад

    Hi. Is there any other software that you can use besides photoshop to achieve the Brenizer effect?

    • @rokzabukovec4685
      @rokzabukovec4685 8 лет назад +1

      Search google for "image composite editor". Its from Microsoft and its, in my opinion even better and faster than photoshop. Plus its a free...cheers

    • @LaurentLamy
      @LaurentLamy 8 лет назад +1

      Thanks man! Unfortunately I am using a mac, but thanks to your suggestion I have discovered Hugin. Gonna try that now.

    • @azkaazkiya984
      @azkaazkiya984 8 лет назад

      heard autostitch is simpler, faster and free

  • @coolstuff8857
    @coolstuff8857 8 лет назад

    Thanks for sharing :) How can I be sure that the focus is consistent throughout all the shots if I use an old vintage lens that only provides manual focus?

    • @andrewford80
      @andrewford80 8 лет назад

      They usually have better dampening than newer lenses so the focus shouldn't change unless you touch it.

    • @coolstuff8857
      @coolstuff8857 8 лет назад

      +andrewford80 thanks for answering my question :) I tried the technique a few days ago by taking a portrait of my friend. Unfortunately half of the shots were out of focus even though I didn't touch the focus ring after I set the focus at the beginning nor did I changed my distance to the subject. I will give it another try to figure out what the problem was.

    • @andrewford80
      @andrewford80 8 лет назад

      ***** bummer. maybe do it on a tripod to ensure you're still? wouldn't take much to throw something out of focus. Keep practicing I guess! Good luck

    • @coolstuff8857
      @coolstuff8857 8 лет назад

      +andrewford80 nice advice :) Thanks

  • @MarioxJolienSpiderFreak
    @MarioxJolienSpiderFreak 8 лет назад

    u shoot in jpeg really? O_o

  • @markharris5771
    @markharris5771 8 лет назад +1

    Seen a few Brenizer interviews and is it possible for there to be nicer, more open photographer in the world? I keep hoping that one of my daughters will bring him home but so far no luck.

  • @maxbashyrov5785
    @maxbashyrov5785 5 лет назад +1

    so the guy just threw his camera on the top of a bag in a car trunk and went for a ride.
    okay.

  • @agrafes6
    @agrafes6 6 лет назад

    I'm very very new to photography, and didn't understand any of what you said at the beginning.
    Please try to make your videos a little easier for people like me, who are just starting out.
    Thanks

  • @nixland
    @nixland 7 лет назад

    You dont give tips about framing each shots yet the title is 'mastering' :)

  • @northernninjafoto3230
    @northernninjafoto3230 7 лет назад

    Who did your make up, Stevie Wonder?😂

  • @bluefilmsltd
    @bluefilmsltd 5 лет назад

    Lol, a 50mm f1.8 lens is NOT going to give you the same look as a 35mm lens would.

  • @badnews9312
    @badnews9312 7 лет назад

    why not just shoot stopped way down then add a gaussian blur filter all around the car after selecting it? seems much quicker and 9 out of 10 would not able to tell the difference - this is exactly why I am not a fan of digital photography - the unbelievable saturation of imagery has really had a damaging effect on the art form.....I truly believe this......and I used to shoot film professionally....made a lot more money back then and got a lot more work back then as well....now literally everyone is a photographer and most of these people think they are extremely talented as well....just look at youpic and gurushots....both sites are full of primarily shit photography by the rankings are unrealistic as hell......very sad state of affairs

    • @TomCooper
      @TomCooper 7 лет назад +1

      badnews maybe some of your problem is a lack of focus, to use a pun. More to the point, why do you have 6-10 topics in a single post?

    • @GRJCLyon
      @GRJCLyon 7 лет назад

      Take ya old ass and your cheap ass film and bounce. Nobody wants to hear your shit.

  • @vicibox
    @vicibox 8 лет назад +5

    How absolutely dreadful. I hate this modern obsession with narrow depth of field. The final image looks dreadful like it was shot with a 1950s cheap camera without a lens hood. A definite thumbs down for this one.

    • @AnttiPah1
      @AnttiPah1 7 лет назад +8

      Then maybe not watch and comment video about it. I dont like football, but i dont comment videos about it.

  • @Cagey7531
    @Cagey7531 8 лет назад

    Most over-rated 'technique' ever in photography. But go ahead and create a look just the same as everyone else that thinks it's trendy

  • @michaelandrews4403
    @michaelandrews4403 7 лет назад

    "Adjust the Exposure." - ...or take an Incident reading with a Handheld Meter.
    Haven't got/don't know how to use a handheld Lightmeter? = Not a Photographer.

    • @tosvus
      @tosvus 7 лет назад +1

      I think you missed the point of the video. This seems aimed at amateurs, and how it can be done with minimal equipment and time.

    • @chrisplunkett2814
      @chrisplunkett2814 6 лет назад +6

      What a blinkered and snobbish view of modern photography you have.Why use a device that must be nearly 100 years old that was needed when cameras had no built in method for determining exposure when almost all modern cameras have this built in and in most cases work exceptionally well? It's like saying you're not a real car driver if you don't start your car with a starting handle through the front valance when every car made in the last 50 years or so has a starter motor to do it for us.In both cases the modern method is preferred by 99.9% of photographers and car drivers.

    • @lylestavast7652
      @lylestavast7652 5 лет назад

      @@chrisplunkett2814 Because an incident meter isn't fooled as often as a camera reflected light meter. Incident measures what is falling on the subject if you point the dome at the camera - no effect of reflections or subject clothing... that's why people use an incident meter, it's a good tool. I often compare incident and in-camera to see what's closest to balanced - and then using the histogram to make sure I didn't blow highlights out...

  • @eg-g
    @eg-g 8 лет назад +5

    Terrible way to show this technique.