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Picture Taking; How To Shoot And Assemble Panoramas; A Set By Set Tutorial
Have you always been intrigued by panoramic photography but couldn’t bring yourself to pony up for a dedicated panorama camera? Well, today you don’t have to. You can create panos in your computer.
Keep It Level
The Nodal Point
To adjust for this you will need to move the camera back and forth; don’t move the whole tripod. I use a macro slider to facilitate this and repeat the first step. Here’s the Really Right Stuff macro slider with the camera body centered over the rotational axis. This is the camera positioned to place the rotational axis under the approximate nodal point of the lens.
Exposure
Select your images, choose the desired format and click “Next.” The “Confirm Sequence” dialog box will now show the images and the placement; you can drag and drop the thumbnails if editing is necessary. When you’re ready, click “Stitch.”
The software will then process all the information and then open the “Fine Tune and Save” window. Here you will typically have several options; Preview, Crop, Straighten, Print or Start Over. If you want to save the image you can choose the file type and location. I choose TIFF and save to the desktop, then, using Photoshop, I tweak the color and contrast to my satisfaction.
Here is an easy problem to avoid. By standing too close to the center of the storefronts I got distortion. Stand a little past one end of architectural subjects and you can avoid this effect.
Textures, patterns and other abstractions can be great fun for panostitching. I’d love to see this Big Sur sand pattern as a jigsaw puzzle.
Contacts ArcSoft, Inc. Bogen Imaging Inc.
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