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You know how when you’re in an airplane about to land, everything down below starts to look like it’s part of a little toy world? Little toy trucks driving around, little tiny ant people, houses made of little play bricks? You can achieve the same effect in your photographs using a fancy schmancy “tilt-shift” lens. (Stay tuned for a $100 alternative we’ll be covering soon!) Or, use Photoshop to achieve the look for free! We’ve been looking for the best tutorial on the technique. This is it. Fake Model Photography in Photoshop
→ See more Photo projects, DIY ideas, and Gear ← → Get it all free: Subscribe by email or RSS ← Give Your Car a Pixar-style Cars Makeover It’s Photoshop. On the Web. From Adobe. (p.s. It’s pretty great.) The Orton Effect — Beautiful, Impressionistic Images from Your Photos Published on May 29, 2006 — See more Post-Processing
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[…] the tutorial we highlighted in our last newsletter. I think this one turned out really nice. Trackback | Bookmark inDel.icio.us […]
Pingback by Photojojo Blog » A Miniature Model Example by Sarah G — May 31, 2006 @ 11:14 pm
[…] http://www.pingmag.jp/2006/03/07/10-tiny-tokyo-photos/ http://www.photojojo.com/content/post-processing/miniature-model-effect-photoshop/ http://www.pingmag.jp/2006/06/02/how-japanese-style-illustration-works/ - hungtd - […]
Pingback by Encyclopedia Knowledge » [Tech] 10 Tiny Tokyo Photos — July 5, 2006 @ 7:03 am
[…] When I saw this article on making fake model toy photographs, I had a little psycho-flashback to the good old days when Dad would drag us all along to his raging model railroading shows at the Clovis, New Mexico Po-dunk City Mall and make me cart around these gi-normous honkin’ train tables made out of cheap-ass splintery hardware store wood that he didn’t bother sanding on the legs "because no one looks at that", but took enough time to paint a lovely shade of honey-stain so I could find the splinters in my hands after half-balancing the table on my eight year old head while he wratcheted the legs on and bitched at me for not being able to hold it all level. […]
Pingback by stargazer » Look at the Cute Wittle Boat — September 24, 2006 @ 4:16 pm
[…] Miniature Model Effect in Photoshop […]
Pingback by Elsewhere…01-10-2007 — January 12, 2007 @ 2:42 pm
[…] Originally Posted by Wicked Neo That photo though, looks weird, makes it look like a model car in a model garage, weird. Yeah one of those where the only thing in focus is the car… On a similar note, there are interesting techniques to make a scene, e.g. an aerial view, appear as a model. Essentially you give the impression that the only thing in focus is the object, so you really blur the foreground and the background. The tactful insertion of hands can help too! There was a great guide I had bookmarked but it’s not longer in existence so here’s a couple of second rate links (slightly photoshop biased, last one is best): Fake model photography fake model quito 2 on Flickr - Photo Sharing! Photojojo » The Miniature Model Effect in Photoshop: It’s a Small World After All http://www.baldheretic.com/category/fake-models/ </GEEK> __________________ […]
Pingback by 1991 Renault 5 GT Turbo, Glacier White - Retro-Renault — August 17, 2007 @ 7:50 pm