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226042x21693px image will make you surprised of the details and the hiden places that could be seen. This is I thing the widest view of the town Kocani where the alomost 70% of the town is visible.
This is the hand made panorama with predicted overlaping. I thought will never complite the result I got. Before last step corrections the pano was between 6-7Gpx, but in order to get the nice composition and quality it was cropped in Photoshop to 5Gpx. At the begining I almost reached the Photoshop limit of 300.000 px. Amazing experiance and result if you exclude the little visible mistakes. And the 30Gb file was uploading for ages. PANORAMA FROM THE OTHER SIDE OF THE TOWN COULD BE SEEN HERE: ПАНОРАМАТА ОД ДРУГАТА СТРАНА НА ГРАДОТ МОЖЕ ДА БИДЕ ВИДЕНА НА СЛЕДНИОВ ЛИНК: (http://gigapan.org/gigapans/30950) Green nature that sarrouns the town, "Brana Gragce" could be seen on folowing link: http://gigapan.org/gigapans/33685/ НА ПРЕТХОДНИОТ ЛИНК МОЖЕ ДА СЕ ВИДИ ИЗЛЕТНИЧКОТО МЕСТО "БРАНА ГРАТЧЕ". |
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Hawaii Pacific University Modern Media Systems class on the Fort Street Mall in Downtown Honolulu. Question of the day: how can a collaboration that includes Carnegie Mellon University, NASA, GOOGLE, National Geographic, and faculty and students at Hawaii Pacific University expand our understanding of modern media systems? In other words, what emerging, unique potentials are being leveraged by these institutions and their communities in our network of networks project? In part this image constitutes an exploration and manifestation of image-making technologies that provide opportunities for meta-connectivity and global community building. A compelling aspect of the global connection project is its attention to transparency. Transparency of technology, transparency of process, and drill down ability in the composite image itself.. |
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First shot i've taken that I feel was worth the extra time to photoshop and make perfect, including everything from the Mercedes Benz shoot to the cars stopped in traffic on the West Side Highway. Also what I think is the first shot taken at this resolution of the new Highline Park that's just opened. Definitely the most time i've ever spent working on a single picture...pretty good view from here. Printing as big as I can as well. enjoy! |
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Note: an earlier GigaPan, http://www.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=30905 , did not include the panoramic view of Pasadena and the Houston Ship Channelarea as does this panorama.
Taken from the 24th floor of Hilton Americas Hotel: http://tinyurl.com/2og9ru An stunning view of Houston from Galena Park and the Houston Ship Channel area westward to the heart of the downtown area, especially so since there are two pillars not shown in this panorama, but yet the view can almost be considered seamless except that the railing shows where there should be a pillar(s). The GigaPan Stitcher comes though with flying colors on this one. The view, taken from the 24th floor and was breathtaking as I took it using my trusty Nikon D70 (soon to be retired) and a Nikkor 50mm f/1.8 lens. There is no Photoshop on this panorama, only the GigaPan Stitcher, and the collection of photos were taken hand-held. |
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Note! We have cleaned up the jagged edges and changed the blue tinge on this panorama and uploaded it again on June 16.
When we arrived to camp here in the evening we saw sea otters swimming nearby and a big cruise ship in the distance. It would be possible to see orcas and many different birds including bald eagles. None of these were present when I took the gigapan, however. This was shot with a Nikon P90 and the Epic 100. I am not sure how to prevent the ragged top of this image. It is happening on others I have shot as well. Does anyone have any suggestions about how to prevent this? I have not yet tried to manipulate the exported images in Photoshop, but this may be the solution. |
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7649994@gmail.com
http://bhol.co.il/news_read.asp?id=9236&cat_id=2 |
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London, England |
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We used Photoshop to crop the jagged edges and enhance the colors in this gigapan compared to the original image I uploaded a few days ago. |
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I'm a Gigapan beginner and I made this picture to test the depth of field of my new Canon G10. The steel frame of the glass window helps to check the sharpness. This gallery, by the way, is beautiful and next to the famous Grand'Place. |
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This was acquired using the gigapan system from top of mc clung tower. A matrix of 25 x 3 scans were made. This image is only for viewing. Any efforts to reproduce it for commerical or non commercial reasons is subject to copyright violations. The Imaging, Robotics and Intelligence Systems (IRIS) lab holds the sole copyright of this image. Photographers: Justin Acuff and Harishwaran 'Hari' Hariharan |
