Search for "The Sandpit" to see the awesome original in HD. That version also has all the details (or links to more details) relating to how it was made and the (very cool) music.
halloha! i realy like this video i think it's cool but resolution is so fricking low and also i cen;t fined the musick used in thise. if anybody know please sand me the link.
... so you took sam o'hares award winning sandpit which is on youtube and has 700 thousand views and thought you could get away with re uploading it in 240p?
Oh and FYI he didn't use a tilt-shift lens for this video...all done in post editing (i.e. Photoshop). Maybe next time you will do your homework as well!
The video is called "The Sandpit" by Sam O'Hare! Quit copying others works of art and trying to claim it as your own or at least give credit where credit is due , you douche bag! Bet you can't even tell the world how many photographs were taken for this film can ya? You should be ashamed! What a dick!
For all that care to watch the REAL video go to vimeo.com and search "The Sandpit"
The primary purpose of t/s is to INCREASE the sharpness of the image field and only tilts and swings can do that. As Zone111 says, shifts have no effect on the PoV at all. Simulating shallow DoF to make a scene appear to be miniature is NOT the primary purpose of T/S, to put it mildly, just as a camera's primary purpose is not to serve as a paperweight although it could be used for that purpose. That's a specialized fad application.
Zone111 is correct. That is, the Wiki entry is incorrect. Unfortunately, readers cannot edit the main part of the article. The movements are described incorrectly and they really do come from large format photography, not small formats. And to suggest, as Wiki does, that T/S is primarly to achieve the effect shown in this video is like saying that the primary purpose of cameras are as paperweights. Sure! They can be used for that but that's not their primarly purpose.
Actually, tilt and shift are terms that mainly and originally refer to camera movements made with large format cameras, not small or medium format cameras. However, there are tilt/shift lenses for small and medium format cameras. Shift is not as explained correctly here. It has nothing to do with plane-of-focus at all. "Tilt" movements, as explained incorrectly here, are actually made up of swing and tilt movments, NOT shift. Shift merely moves the lens or film (sensor) plane sideways.
@ZoneIII Continued... The movements are: swing, tilt, rise, and fall. Swing and tilt control the plane of focus when done at the lens plane. But when done at the film plane, the also control the plane-of-focus but they also control apparent perspective. Rise, fall, and shift, however, have no effect on the plane of focus whatsoever. Those moments, whether done at the lens or film/sensor plane, merely move the image up, down, or sideways for positioning purposes.
@ZoneIII That said, rise/fall and shift (referred incorrectly in the description of this video as shift) can be used to indirectly control perspective because, for example, when the camera lens is raised, a tall structure can fit on the film/sensor plane without having to point the camera up. If the film/sensor is not perfectly vertical, keystoning is the result. Shift has nothing to do with Scheimphlug. Only swings and tilts do. Again, this all comes from large format photography.
@ZoneIII If someone wants to know how this stuff really works, I suggest looking up "large format photography," "camera movements," etc. on Wikipedia or the Internet in general or get a book on large format photography such as Ansel Adams's, The Camera. One other point: Swings and tilts are usually used to change the plane of focus so TO KEEP things in focus, not to put them out-of-focus. For examples, go to my YouTube channel and then click on my website link.
The Sandpit , type that in to youtube and you'll get the original.
what a ripoff, gonesouthnow you should b ashamed of yourself....
FLYBOYproductions94 2 days ago
Search for "The Sandpit" to see the awesome original in HD. That version also has all the details (or links to more details) relating to how it was made and the (very cool) music.
planetjason1 4 weeks ago
halloha! i realy like this video i think it's cool but resolution is so fricking low and also i cen;t fined the musick used in thise. if anybody know please sand me the link.
DJGREYNOISE 1 month ago
Who cares whos it is. Well posted i like it.
dumptonpark 2 months ago
240p here we meet again
xDuXx 3 months ago
0:55 thumbs up for gta 4 helipad
tobats2 4 months ago
Please remove this video! It's not yours!
thenewoldbiddy 4 months ago 3
... so you took sam o'hares award winning sandpit which is on youtube and has 700 thousand views and thought you could get away with re uploading it in 240p?
cubesandpi 4 months ago
I want to know whose music is featured in this...That's all I care about!
treebeard431 5 months ago
Oh and FYI he didn't use a tilt-shift lens for this video...all done in post editing (i.e. Photoshop). Maybe next time you will do your homework as well!
gazoo31513 6 months ago
The video is called "The Sandpit" by Sam O'Hare! Quit copying others works of art and trying to claim it as your own or at least give credit where credit is due , you douche bag! Bet you can't even tell the world how many photographs were taken for this film can ya? You should be ashamed! What a dick!
For all that care to watch the REAL video go to vimeo.com and search "The Sandpit"
gazoo31513 6 months ago
0:31 LOL GTA IV
EduWestCoastRap 6 months ago
dude the quality..... and u didnt orginially make the vid.... why post it again
ollierodgers1 9 months ago 14
Great video although a lot of impact is lost due to the low 240p resolution....
hifispec01 9 months ago
1:43 mirror's edge city D:
BlackRockSh00ter1 1 year ago 10
@BlackRockSh00ter1 Hah!
Clindian 11 months ago
I freaking love it :) I love how the tilt shift makes it look like tiny little toys in an elaborate stop animation film :)
brandonmack111 1 year ago
Boring... pointless...
LalitaXZ 1 year ago
@LalitaXZ stupid... unappreciative ...
jeesh123 1 year ago
@jeesh123
Stupid? Not at all.
Unappreciative? Of this? Absolutely.
Tolerant of different opinions? Also absolutely, which obviously you're not.
LalitaXZ 1 year ago
Comment removed
LalitaXZ 1 year ago
The primary purpose of t/s is to INCREASE the sharpness of the image field and only tilts and swings can do that. As Zone111 says, shifts have no effect on the PoV at all. Simulating shallow DoF to make a scene appear to be miniature is NOT the primary purpose of T/S, to put it mildly, just as a camera's primary purpose is not to serve as a paperweight although it could be used for that purpose. That's a specialized fad application.
riversideslim 1 year ago
Zone111 is correct. That is, the Wiki entry is incorrect. Unfortunately, readers cannot edit the main part of the article. The movements are described incorrectly and they really do come from large format photography, not small formats. And to suggest, as Wiki does, that T/S is primarly to achieve the effect shown in this video is like saying that the primary purpose of cameras are as paperweights. Sure! They can be used for that but that's not their primarly purpose.
riversideslim 1 year ago
Actually, tilt and shift are terms that mainly and originally refer to camera movements made with large format cameras, not small or medium format cameras. However, there are tilt/shift lenses for small and medium format cameras. Shift is not as explained correctly here. It has nothing to do with plane-of-focus at all. "Tilt" movements, as explained incorrectly here, are actually made up of swing and tilt movments, NOT shift. Shift merely moves the lens or film (sensor) plane sideways.
ZoneIII 1 year ago
@ZoneIII Continued... The movements are: swing, tilt, rise, and fall. Swing and tilt control the plane of focus when done at the lens plane. But when done at the film plane, the also control the plane-of-focus but they also control apparent perspective. Rise, fall, and shift, however, have no effect on the plane of focus whatsoever. Those moments, whether done at the lens or film/sensor plane, merely move the image up, down, or sideways for positioning purposes.
ZoneIII 1 year ago
@ZoneIII That said, rise/fall and shift (referred incorrectly in the description of this video as shift) can be used to indirectly control perspective because, for example, when the camera lens is raised, a tall structure can fit on the film/sensor plane without having to point the camera up. If the film/sensor is not perfectly vertical, keystoning is the result. Shift has nothing to do with Scheimphlug. Only swings and tilts do. Again, this all comes from large format photography.
ZoneIII 1 year ago
@ZoneIII If someone wants to know how this stuff really works, I suggest looking up "large format photography," "camera movements," etc. on Wikipedia or the Internet in general or get a book on large format photography such as Ansel Adams's, The Camera. One other point: Swings and tilts are usually used to change the plane of focus so TO KEEP things in focus, not to put them out-of-focus. For examples, go to my YouTube channel and then click on my website link.
ZoneIII 1 year ago
Precioso
eocenico 1 year ago