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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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London, England |
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This was my recent show, Light Forms - Airy Constructions of Paper, Reed and Wood at Associated Artists of Butler County, The Art Center, 344 S. Main Street, Butler, Pa 16055. It features my luminescent sculptures. http://www.theartcenterbutlerpa.org
http://www.wandamarie.etsy.com http://www.easilyamusedstudio.com |
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Taken from the View Lounge on top of the Marriott in San Fransico, looking west away from downtown. Visibility was not superb, so I may return and take the photo again on a more clear evening. Some opportunites for more excitement might also present themsevles when the convention center is hosting a large converence, or closer to the busy holiday season. |
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360 of the interior of St James Church, Poole.
Our first ever attempt at using Gigapan was in the church-yard of St James Church (see here: http://share.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=19748) - the church wardens were so impressed that they invited us back to shoot one inside of the impressive interior. Messed up a little bit on the join and forgot it doesn't overlap on a 360, so isn't quite symmetrical, but I will try and fix this soon and also hopefully fix the stitching errors in the ceiling. Other than that, very pleased!! Taken by Alice Ralph and Denis Roberts of KUBE, Poole - www.kubepoole.org.uk |
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Near the state line of Massachusetts and Vermont.
If drawing a line from the center of top edge to the center of right side, the triangle of top right corner (about 1/8 of the photo) is in Vermont, the rest is in Massachusetts. |
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Stephen King fans celebrate the release of his long-awaited new novel, UNDER THE DOME, by hiding words from the book’s final sentences along the North Bank of London’s River Thames, under the dome of St Paul’s cathedral.
The novelist’s final forty-five words - displayed on banners and placards - are scattered throughout the Gigapan image by randomly placed members of the public. The book’s conclusion is revealed by zooming in on the shot and reassembling the scrambled sentences. www.stephenking.co.uk Image by nathangallagher.com |
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Jackson Square is viewed from the podium near the Mississippi River levee. This is one of the grandest plazas in the USA, due in part to the influence of the Spanish and French colonists who took turns ruling Louisiana as a colony --- until Napoleon sold it to the USA through the efforts of Thomas Jefferson in 1803. Napoleon needed the money to finance his European campaigns and Jefferson wanted the young nation to expand into the territories secured by his Louisiana Purchase. Here, in Jackson Square, the transfer of governments was carried out amidst much pomp and fanfare. It wasn't until 1814, when General Andrew Jackson saved the city (along with local help from the pirate Jean LaFitte) from the invading British that the square was named in his honour. Later, the equestrian statue of Jackson was made to adorn the centre of the plaza. Symmetrically, on either side of the French-styled St. Louis Cathedral are the Cabildo buildings, built to house the Spanish colonial government when Spain ruled the colony. They now form part of the Louisiana Museum complex. Again, symmetrically, on the sides of the plaza are the two Pontalba apartments, which even today are luxurious apartments for the rich and famous. The alleys between the Pontalba apartments are frequented today by artists, street performers and fortune-tellers, and in the space between the Cathedral and the Square one is certain to hear the wonderful sounds of Dixieland Jazz all year round. |
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This building is named after Brendan Bracken, former chairman of the Financial Times, who was also appointed as the Minister of Information in Winston's war time cabinet, which was published here until the 1980s. The building was among the first post-war buildings in the City of London to be listed and its redevelopment retained the entire outside façade, including the elegant astronomical clock approximately 1 metre in diameter bearing at its centre a face of Winston Churchill, a personal friend of Brendan Bracken.
This work by Philip Bentham is in gilt metal and enamel. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brendan_Bracken |
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The Angel of the North by Antony Gormley, is located beside the A1 Great North Road as it enters Tyneside. Now celebrating its 10th birthday, it is seen by some 90,000 drivers a day! By the way - the wings are in fact straight, and this image may be best seen in Google Earth! |
