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The telescope field at Calstar 2009, a star party held each year at Lake San Antonio in the central coast range of California. Three nights of dark sky observing on Sept 17,18,19. Dozens of scopes and imaging gear - from binoculars to monster dobsonians. This pano was taken in fading light as people began to move onto the field to ready their gear for the nights observing.
Processing: Focus blending CS4, NR Neat Image, Stitching PTGui Pro version 8.2.2 (Windows) Panorama size: 355 megapixels (34706 x 10231 pixels) Field of View: 40.9 degrees wide, 12.3 degrees high Input images: 65 (13 columns by 5 rows) Settings: Camera make: Olympus Camera model: Olympus E-620 Image size: 4032x3024 (12.2 megapixels) Aperture: f/8 Exposure time(s): 1/60, 1/80, 1/400 ISO: 200 Focal length (35mm equiv.): 380.0 mm Digital zoom: off White balance: Fixed Exposure mode: Manual Horizontal overlap: 37.3 to 45.8 percent Vertical overlap: 32.8 to 36.5 percent |
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My first gigapan stitch. Camera did not have exposure lock, hence banding. |
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I arrived at Crater Lake too late to shoot the classic Wizard Island panorama and thought I had missed the light entirely. Then, just before pulling away from the lake I spotted this scene and decided to pull out the GigaPan for one last shot before sunset. |
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This photo was taken from Sam Lawrence Park in Hamilton, Ontario. It shows a spectacular view of the city as well as Lake Ontario. |
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I have been here before and have taken a number of GigaPan panoramas:
the series on the Japanese Garden: http://tinyurl.com/Houston-JapaneseGarden, Luck in Hermann Park panorama, http://www.gigapan.org/gigapans/25558/ and the Celebration of Love panorama, http://www.gigapan.org/gigapans/29445/ This hand-held, 360-degree panorama was taken with a Leica D-Lux 3 camera and was stitched using the GigaPan Stitcher software. Additional details can be found on Stitcher Notes with information there concerning the GigaPan Stitcher run. Note: This glorius panorama can be seen in Google Earth as a curved panorama on a curved surface by clicking the link, View in Google Earth (assuming that you have Google Earth installed on your computer). |
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Lake Harriet is a heavily-used urban lake in Minneapolis, part of a chain of lakes that stretches through the city to the Mississippi River.
This is also a test of the Raynox DCR-1540 tele adapter. The extra weight in front of the camera makes the GigaPan Epic jerk from one position to the next. It appears, however, that with a 3.5 sec. time between pictures the jerking is not a problem. Stitching notes: GigaPan Stitcher version 0.4.3865 (Macintosh) Panorama size: 475 megapixels (24759 x 19193 pixels) Input images: 56 (7 columns by 8 rows) Field of view: 79.0 degrees wide by 61.3 degrees high (top=28.6, bottom=-32.7) Original image properties: Camera: Canon PowerShot G10 Image size: 4416x3312, 4459x3340 (14.6 megapixels - 14.9 megapixels) Capture time: 2009-06-07 10:16:27 - 2009-06-07 10:20:45 Exposure: 1/30 at f/8 ISO: 80 Focal length (35mm equiv.): 219mm with Raynox DCR-1540 1.54X aux. lens Digital zoom: no way Exposure mode: Manual Horizontal overlap: 23.5 to 36.8 percent Vertical overlap: 27.9 to 33.5 percent Computer stats: 8192 MB RAM, 4 CPUs Total time 47:08 (0:50 per picture) Alignment: 1:59, Projection: 5:50, Blending: 39:18 |
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My first gigapixel panoramic taken of Lake Eola in Downtown Orlando taken with a 20D/400mm lens on a Merlin head. |
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While driving thru Yosemite Park, we came across a lake around 6 am and it was very still and cold. The lake appeared to be a mirror, it was quite beautiful. This is a 180 degree view and was hand-stitched in Photoshop. |
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One of the thousands lakes in Poland
http://www.panoramio.com/user/1912325 |
