Toys in the bathtub — TTT 03 Apr
Let’s just wash away the ickiness of that last movie link with something technologically intriguing.
There’s been a photographic technique that’s been becoming more and more popular over the last couple years, called tilt shift miniaturization. In a nutshell, using special lenses and/or manipulated blurring and color intensification effects results in a photograph which seems as though it was taken of a table-top sized model.
Here’s some examples:



Pretty cool, eh? Remember, those are real scenes, not miniatures.
So here’s the coolest thing. A fellow named Keith Loutit worked with the Westpac Rescue Helicopter Service in New South Wales, Australia, to make an entire movie using this tilt-shift miniaturization technique. This is a real training mission even though it looks like stop-motion animation. It’s amazing!
Wikipedia entry on tilt-shift miniature faking.
Here is Loutit’s site on Vimeo at which he gives a few more details about the film. It’s worth clicking here to watch the movie again in a larger size, and in high-def.
April 3rd, 2009 at 1:05 pm
That is very interesting. I guess the field of focus with tiny things is small, so blurring bigger things edges does the same thing? Very neat, thank you.
April 3rd, 2009 at 1:51 pm
The music is by Maggie Washington, of Sydney.
Take me out
Take me home
Take me anywhere I walked a hundred miles so I
could
give a dog a bone
I’m alright
I don’t mind
I’m just running
into
something bigger than the something
that I left behind
Oh my
darling
Clementine
Turn the water
into holy water
You are
restless
Very Young
Got a message from your mother
said to tell you
she’ll
be coming round the mountain when she comes
Oh my
darling
Clementine
Turn the water
into holy water
Oh my
darling
Clementine
Turn the water
into a little bit more time.
Take
me out
Take me home
Take me anywhere
I walked a hundred miles
so I could
hear them play your song on the radio.