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  2. Tilt–shift photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiltshift_photography

    In 2013, Samyang Optics introduced one of the cheapest today tiltshift lenses, the Samyang T-S 24mm f/3.5 ED AS UMC, which can tilt up to 8.5 degrees and shift up to 12mm of axis. [16] ARAX introduced a 35 mm f/2.8 and an 80 mm f/2.8 tiltshift lens, which are available for several camera mounts.

  3. Canon TS-E 17mm lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canon_TS-E_17mm_lens

    The Canon TS-E 17 mm f / 4L is a tilt-shift, ultra-wide-angle prime lens that provides the equivalent of the corresponding view camera front movements on Canon EOS camera bodies. Unlike most other EF-mount lenses, it does not provide autofocus.

  4. Canon TS-E 24mm lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canon_TS-E_24mm_lens

    The TS-E 24 mm f / 3.5L II lens provides four degrees of freedom, allowing ±8.5° tilt with respect to the film or sensor plane and ±12 mm shift with respect to the center of the image area; [1] each movement can be rotated ±90° about the lens axis.

  5. Canon TS-E 135mm lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canon_TS-E_135mm_lens

    The TS-E 135 mm f / 4L MACRO was the first lens from Canon which combined Macro and tilt-shift. It was announced together with a series of lenses, the TS-E 50 mm f / 2.8L MACRO and the TS-E 90 mm f/2.8L MACRO, which introduced the same features.

  6. Canon TS-E 45mm lens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canon_TS-E_45mm_lens

    The tilt and shift functions cannot be independently rotated. The lens is supplied with these functions at 90° to each other (e.g., providing tilt and lateral shift); they can be changed to work in the same directions (e.g., providing tilt and rise/fall) by removing four screws, rotating the front of the lens 90°, and reinstalling the screws.

  7. Scheimpflug principle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scheimpflug_principle

    Tilt and swing are movements available on most view cameras, often on both the front and rear standards, and on some small- and medium format cameras using special lenses that partially emulate view-camera movements. Such lenses are often called tilt-shift or "perspective control" lenses.