| Aperture | ƒ/8 |
| Camera | Canon EOS 6D |
| Focal length | 24mm |
| ISO | 160 |
| Shutter speed | 1/250s |
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Santa Cruz Sunrise

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The Brenizer Method – shallow DOF and wide angle
I love shallow depth of field and the Brenizer Method (or bokeh panorama) is an intriguing way of achieving that in a wide angle shot.
Basically, with your lens zoomed in you take many overlapping photos of your scene like you would a panorama but you don’t go for the traditional 360 degree image. It’s more like 50-90 degrees, or what a “normal” lens would see. The beauty of the technique is achieving a very shallow depth of field because your lens is zoomed in and the DOF is shallower still than it would be wide open, or so I’ve read. I haven’t managed to take such a photo yet!
Here’s a great video showing how to do it with Photoshop, but you could use Hugin or Microsoft Ice as well.
Take a look at the stunning photos here, here and here. Beautiful.
- The Tin Pub in Ahakista (2006)
- Boy all alone on the street (2007)
- Sometimes if you’re trying to sell photos you won’
- The Gentleman Clown (2008)
- Castle on the hill (2009)
- Milk (2012)
- Isabella (2014)
- Headphones (2015)
- The Ghosts of Debenhams (2015)
- London Skyline (2016)
- Fog near the river (2017)
- Tree After Sunset (2021)
- Strands of beauty treatments (2022)
- Tracks in the field (2023)
- Happy Gotcha Day, Diego! (2024)
- Here, smell this! (2025)



























