Three stitched photos of the St. Lawrence River with Québec City on theleft and Lévis on the right
Hope this works. If so, would you sahre yours? :)
Wow, you've done a magnificent job on this! Love the detail.
I've been working on stitching photographs. I don't know what the difference of a panorama and a stitched photograph is but. This is one I tested on today. Nothing special just a building in a community I was helping out today.
It's 6 photographs total.
Roadrunner wrote:
Three stitched photos of the St. Lawrence River with Québec City on the left and Lévis on the right
Hope this works. If so, would you share yours? :)
Sure. Here are some I took of colorful condos on Paradise Island, Nassau. I did them in one continuous pano, but that makes the image too small to appreciate on the web.
Nassau Condos 1
Nassau Condos 2
Here is another one. This is Marigot on St. Martin in the Caribbean, as seen from Fort Louis on top of the hill.
Yes, Architect, I lke the depth of field that we get as you have in the first two, setting the apex in the middle or just off center a bit.
Hey JW...I think...''think'' that stitching is connecting multi pics whereas panos are a single shot which has been cropped latterally. But then as usual I'm probably wrong
Roadrunner wrote:
Yes, Architect, I lke the depth of field that we get as you have in the first two, setting the apex in the middle or just off center a bit.
Hey JW...I think...''think'' that stitching is connecting multi pics whereas panos are a single shot which has been cropped latterally. But then as usual I'm probably wrong
I think you might actually be right, but pano's are shot in multiples as well? humm, I think we have asked a new question!!! lol
I really got into panoramas this summer on vacation in Colorado. This panorama was actually six pictures. Photoshop put them together in about 10 seconds. Amazing.
This is a view of the ski town of Breckenridge, Colorado, taken from the turnout on Boreas Pass Road.
Nice composition...should be some great hiking out there, without forgetting the skiing of course.
Six, eh? Six would work well with the mountains. Around here, because it is pretty flat I go with four mostly. I then crop them to create a panoramic view. But you can also crop out a single shot to make a pano
Québec City
Jackman, Maine
Kancamagus Hwy, White Mountains NH
I just found a "pano" software on my pc last weekend and have taken these since.
First 360 deg of neighborhood. Need a better tripod for 360's.
Pano of inlaws home.
Fall color maple tree in my front yard.
The church steaple looks great! It would make a realy nice book mark, atleast that's the first thing that came to my mind. Also the winter shot of your town reminds me of home. Nice work!
cj
Loc: Emporium, Pa
Gentlemen,,,
what photo application are you using to stitch?
I may need to ask for some help
cj wrote:
Gentlemen,,,
what photo application are you using to stitch?
I may need to ask for some help
Hi,
I use HP Image Zone. For the vertical, you shoot horizontally, three shots, bottom up to top, then assemble them and turn 90°
rlaugh
Loc: Michigan & Florida
A pano lets you get more of a scene then your camera can get in one shot, unless you back up half a mile. Most are 3 or more shots stitched together. One shot cropped to look like a pano is just creative cropping. Try taking 3 or 4 shots and stitch them together. Then try taking that same picture in one shot and see how far back you have to get to get it all in. Panos let you get closer to your subject and get a wider picture.
cj
Loc: Emporium, Pa
Mine is 4 shots I want to stitch, from this past weekend at DC.
I searched some more on here re: stitching, and went through tons of info. maybe too much info.
so Im torn between which freeware I'm going to try.
Roadrunner, I'll look up HP Image Zone, as well your shots are awesome.
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