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This GigaPan was taken with an Olympus e510 (custom bracket) and the 40-150mm kit lens set at 100 (200mm equivalent). This was taken at almost peak foliage color. The green is evergreen trees and oak that turns dirty brown later. |
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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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This historic Sawmill was built in the year 1863, and restored in 1955 & 2005.
This 8 sided mill is powered by 4 vanes of 22.5 meter length (74 foot ) each, and drives 3 huge saw blades. Now a days the mill is operated by a group of volunteers, who run the mill as a museum (open for public on saterday and tuesday). On the photo you can see the volunteers hoisting in a tree trunk from the water reservoir. Unfortunately the mill started rotating again when the shooting was about halfway. I tried timing the rotation in order to catch the last right hand vane in horizontal position ( took about 30 extra photo's on that attempt). Since I used a large overlap for such purposes, I was able to reconstruct the vane in the air. I will try to patch up the messy reflection in the water on the finished photo before printing on canvas. |
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El Guadalquivir divide a Sevilla en dos. Sin duda cruzarlo y pasear persiguiendo la luz del Sol, nos deparara magnificas vistas.
El Pabellon de Argentina, actual Conservatorio de Danza, es uno de los edificios legados a la ciudad por la Exposicion Iberoamericana de 1929. Panoramica compuesta por 32 tomas a pulso (16x2), se han unido con Hugin. Ultimos retoques con Gimp. Datos de cada toma: Canon EOS 400D - Canon EF 28-105mm - focal:68mm - ISO:200 - Av:9 - Tv:1/320 Puedes ver otras gigapan en: http://www.gigapan.org/searchGigapansList.php?sort=popular&keywords=zalosev You can see other gigapan: http://www.gigapan.org/searchGigapansList.php?sort=popular&keywords=zalosev Cualquier uso comercial o publicación de la imagen, completa o parcialmente, sin autorización previa y por escrito del propietario de los derechos de autor, está terminantemente prohibida. Any commercial use or publication of the image, in whole or in part, without prior written authorization of the copyright holder is strictly prohibited. |
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This was taken last Friday afternoon and is of two students studying (really). I am happy with the depth of focus (taken at f8) that can readily be seen in this panorama, which makes for a great view in Google Earth. This GigaPan is taken from a larger panorama, which can be seen via this link: http://www.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?auth=57735f00faff42178da3c56c29b2d08c |
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Mt. Rainier looms large over a small tarn on the Naches Peak loop trail which winds its way through the William O. Douglas Wilderness and Mt. Rainier National Park. |
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Taken on a Friday afternoon and shows lots of light levels or zones; plus it is all in focus from the wall of Fondren to the nearest rock by the reflection pool. See Stitcher Notes for exposure details and as always, viewing GigaPans in Google Earth is a positive visual experience. |
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A peaceful place to fish (esp. if you're a great blue heron......) |
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The wonderful reflections of the Langdale Pikes in the waters of Blea Tarn, in the late afternoon. This is a re-upload of this panorama due to a fault during the previous upload - it should now show more detail in the image. |
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The National Stadium in Beijing, the main stadium for the 2008 Olympic Games, is dubbed the "bird's nest" because of its innovative grid formation. The twig-like structural elements and the bowl-shaped roof are the masterpiece of the project, |
