So, @OpenCube had some questions about an image in one of the recent C&C threads, which had a look like a painting:
It turned out that in this specific image the effect has been done in post.
However:
... I'm just strangely obsessed with getting that painterly feeling...and I want it in camera, not post. It has to be possible somehow. I'm admitted kinda laughing at also having something like my own clouds folder...all 57 gigs of it.😂
So I tried to offer a couple of initial ideas:
1.) some old lenses display a lot of painterly look (depending on what you mean by that... after all there are lots of different styles!):
What if it isn't a reflection... but a parallel universe? by simple.joy, on Flickr
Don't be another brick in the wall. Stand out! by simple.joy, on Flickr
Imgrassionism by simple.joy, on Flickr
You think that makes you an artist? by simple.joy, on Flickr
Is there a point to all this noise? by simple.joy, on Flickr
In pour taste by simple.joy, on FlickrIt's very dependent on the kind of light though and I feel like for painterly clear bokeh highlights (rings/bubbles/shapes) need to be avoided for the most part.
2.) You can try getting a transparent or glass (an old filter?) and scratching it... then hold it at different distances from the front of your lens and see what it does. There may be a way to provide some textured feel to your image (like a canvas or paper tend to show). Experimenting with different sized scratches and patterns could yield interesting results.
This isn't exactly the idea described above, but a little bit similar in its approach:
Trying to bokeh hole in my idea? by simple.joy, on Flickr
While some of those approaches/ideas/lenses might work in certain situations, it still doesn't provide an answer to the original question, I'm afraid, because the initial image shows a background with a textured look to it, and from my limited experience that still looks somewhat different from the experimental rendering of the lenses and techniques mentioned.
So I wanted to pose the question to everyone here (particularly also to the more technical-savvy and people, if they're still around here reading from time to time...):
Do you think there's a technique to achieve a look like that in-camera? And if you have already made it work, how were you able to do so?
I would be very interested and thankful and am sure some other people here could make excellent use of such a technique as well!