What is miniature effect




















Click to create a new gradient in Gradients palette. It is very important to make this gradient correct. White colors should be in the edges, and dark gray and black colors should be added to the middle.

Your image will be covered with a transparent red mask. Make sure that the new created gradient is selected. You will notice that the red transparent mask will cover only the middle part of the image. However, make sure that this mask is not precisely in the middle, but just a bit lower. Now your image should have two parts selected — a wider part on the top and a smaller on the bottom.

The slice of focus in this photo was made with the Lensbaby Edge Start by finding a vantage point above your subject that provides a lot of depth. To get the miniature effect with PicMonkey, open your photo in the Editor and head to the Effects tab, then find Miniature in the Camera Look group. Start by turning up the Impact slider so you can get a sense of what the effect does. Adjust the width of the focus area by moving the Focal size slider.

Now adjust the Impact slider again, until you get a look you like. Increase the boost for more saturation and a vintage feel. Try them both out and see what works better for your photo. Circular was a better option for the photo below, since Linear includes too many distracting elements in the slice of focus.

Circular eliminates distractions and puts the focus on the cars on the bridge. In fact, the sky and the budget are really the only limits! Even with the inception of CGI we still see many instances of miniature models in use over computer graphics to achieve certain shots and scenes.

Miniatures have provided a more solid use mechanism in many cases as compared to CGI. And continue to offer an opportunity for cinematographers to create amazingly scaled versions of the desired scenes.

So many other instances of miniature models in film could be brought up. Furthermore, the use of miniature models has long been a profound means of establishing amazingly intricate details for a production. In regards to the creation of imaginative worlds, unique locations, and insane special effects that simply could not be pulled off if it were not for the use of scaled down versions of the various on-screen elements.

Filmmakers use miniature models in films to spike your imagination and create the impossible. Your email address will not be published.

To Top Scroll Down. Our Work. Notice the two horizontal solid lines directly above and below the pin's center point. The area in between these two lines remains sharp and focused, completely protected from the blur effect, and this becomes our plane of focus. Everything above and below the plane of focus is blurred. We'll learn how to adjust the location and size of this protected area in a moment:.

By default, Photoshop places the pin in the center of the image, but we can move the pin anywhere we want. To move it, click on the pin's center point, keep your mouse button held down, then drag it to where you need it. The entire blur effect, including the protected plane of focus, will move along with it.

For example, I'll move my pin up higher in the image, and here we can see that the protected area has moved higher up as well:. In my case though, I actually want my pin to be back where it was in the center of the image.

This returns my pin, and the entire blur effect, back to it's original spot:. As we've learned, the protected area is the area between the two solid lines. We can resize this area simply by moving the lines. If you look closely, you'll see a small dot in the center of each line. Click on the dot, keep your mouse button held down, then drag the dot up or down to reposition the line.

The Tilt-Shift filter actually lets us rotate the lines as well, but that's not usually what we want to do for this effect, so to avoid rotating the protected area, press and hold your Shift key as you drag the dots.

This will make it easier to drag straight up or down:.



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