First attempt at Pano's.

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First attempt at Pano's.

Postby stormygirl on Thu Mar 16, 2006 3:17 pm

The title says it all really.... :wink:

These were taken down at Flinders on the weekend, and stitched together using Panorama Factory. There is slight ghosting, which I tried to fix, but couldn't figure it out properly.....RTFM error!

Image

Image
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Postby avkomp on Thu Mar 16, 2006 3:38 pm

2 nice shots for a first attempt at a pano.

I like panofactory for doing this sort of thing
check out my image gallery @
http://photography.avkomp.com/gallery3
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Postby johnd on Thu Mar 16, 2006 3:42 pm

Nice panos Jane.

I can see a bit of ghosting in the first pano, but not in the second one. (Maybe you can at a higher reolution). If you're using V4 of PF, you can ouput a photoshop psd file with each image as a separate layer. Then you can fix any ghosting pretty easily in photoshop. I believe you can also fix ghosting in PF in semi auto mode, but I've never really figured that part out and it's easy to fix in photoshop.

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Postby Alpha_7 on Thu Mar 16, 2006 4:00 pm

Nice shots, I like the second one the most and think that even a right pano would work featuring the bay and the wharf and less of the vegetation.
PF is a great tool and plenty of fun, I hope these encourage you to take more Pano shots.
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Postby stormygirl on Thu Mar 16, 2006 10:35 pm

Thanks Guys!

As I said, it was my first attempt, and I have a lot to learn, but that's all part of the fun of it! I didn't use a tripod, but lined up the horizon with the grid in the viewfinder. I also made sure I locked in the exposure.

Plenty of fun, and will definately be doing more now I know it's really not difficult!
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Postby kipper on Thu Mar 16, 2006 10:40 pm

Jane did you walk to the right of the pier where the cliff is on the right?
When I was there last there were Australian Ibis, White Faced Herons and Pied/Sooty Oyster Catcher (can't remember which).
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Postby stormygirl on Thu Mar 16, 2006 10:49 pm

Hi Darryl,

I was lucky enough to be down there when they had the lowest tide of the year, and over the cliff to the right of the last pano is the Flinders Ocean Beach. During the low tide a large area of rocks and seaweed is exposed (it's almost as if you are on another world!), and there were grey herrons or Ibises as well as other birds (can't tell you which ones!). I had the kids and not my camera unfortunately, but it is a wonderful protected marine environment, and this time next year I'll take my camera!
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Postby obzelite on Fri Mar 17, 2006 2:23 am

its hard to do, unless you get a mount for the tripod, but the rotation of the camera to each view needs to be around the end of the lens.
Normal tripods rotate around somewhere on the camera body, or lens if your using something large.
rotate around the lens and stitching become a whole heap easier.
This explains it better.

Image


google 'panorama camera mount'
Simon
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Postby Gordon on Fri Mar 17, 2006 7:43 am

Nice work Jane, dont worry about not using a tripod, all the panos I have posted here: http://members.ozemail.com.au/~loomberah/panoramas.htm
were hand held. Those grid lines are really useful ;) I have them on all the time.

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Postby mudder on Fri Mar 17, 2006 8:04 am

These look terrific, pano's are surprisingly tricky to do well and if these are your first goes at pano's, then you've done bloody well...

I always had trouble with hand-held stuff in that I was cropping (in camera) to closely to the framing I wanted as an end result, but once the images were joined up I lost my framing due to needing to crop the stitched image to "square up" the image (hmmmm, didn't know how to explain that!)...

Were the frames vertically or horizontally oriented (ie: portrait or landscape)? Only reason I ask is that portrait seems to gives more room to manouver when stitching... Also pushes the (what's been explained to me as) the extreme ends of the image which are most vulnerable to distortion into the areas that you'll probably crop out later...

Re: the pano head, I purchased a King Pano which seems terrific but haven't usedd it yet, I think the nodal point of the lens becomes more important when using foreground subjects in a landscape for interest in a pano, where the parallax would be the most severe....?
Aka Andrew
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Postby stormygirl on Fri Mar 17, 2006 9:22 am

Thanks guys, I appreciate the kind comments!

Mudder, they were landscape orientation. I'll eventually try protrait ones, but basically did them rather quickly just so I could try it out! I perhaps shouldn't have used 18mm on the kit lens either due to barrel distortion, but I don't think it's too obvious :wink: .

I might one day invest in a pano head, it certainly makes sense, but at the moment I need to expand my glass!

Gordon, your panos are gorgeous! I have the grid on my viewfinder on all the time too.

I'll keep trying and learning, and I'm actually really enjoying PPing too. Still have colour cast issues, but I think I've learnt to overcome them......
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