That 3D look

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Pentax 50/2.8 Macro
 
This one is a little different because it doesn't have the layers of DOF. I think it qualifies with the funky play with perspective. At a glance it isn't quite clear which direction it's going.

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How would you identify in the posted images a 3D effect, compared to OOF and bokeh? Thete sems yo be an overlap.
 
The way light and shadows fall can help create a 3D effect. And its particularly so if this effect is complemented by having suitable out of focus areas falling in the right areas. If the right photo comes along and the lighting does not produce a suitably 3D effect when I think this would help the image, I am not averse to doing a little vignetting in Photoshop to help it a long. But its all relative - photography is a 2D medium and 3D can really only be suggested - never achieved strongly.

This image for example I think has quite a 3D feeling because of the way the shadows fall helped a bit by where the point of focus is. You dont necessarily need a lot of OOF blur - enough to suggest depth may be all you need in some cases. In this first shot the OOF is very subtle but still helps.


_DSC4013a1 by yoyomaoz, on Flickr

Similarly perhaps with this shot - I was experimenting with a Voightlander 50mm Nokton and its shallow depth of field. Here the DOF certainly has helped as has the lighting to some extent:


L1042013 by yoyomaoz, on Flickr

Here is another shot where lighting and point of focus combine to help produce a 3D effect:


_DSC5552 -1 by yoyomaoz, on Flickr

As it does here where the out of focus areas are even stronger


L1041851a by yoyomaoz, on Flickr

And finally lets not forget images which suggest a 3D effect because of perspective (the oldest trick in the artist's book!)


_DSC5430Aa by yoyomaoz, on Flickr
 
some nice shots, but I don't see it in your shots like I do in say acroolite's does.

something in the Zeiss design choice seems to contribute to it, and lenses that people think look "zeiss-y" tend to do it too. probably the lens I've seen it most consistently out of (and that's somewhat of a misnomer) is the 100MP.
 
some nice shots, but I don't see it in your shots like I do in say acroolite's does.

something in the Zeiss design choice seems to contribute to it, and lenses that people think look "zeiss-y" tend to do it too. probably the lens I've seen it most consistently out of (and that's somewhat of a misnomer) is the 100MP.


There is no doubt acroolite has some good shots which combine extreme sharpness with soft OOF and that this helps a lot. But I still think that other factors - sharpness, OOF, shadow/light and perspective all play a role in helping create the illusion too.
 
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