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Snapshots
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By:E T (gigapanbot) on
August 11, 2008
Tags:
ginger
,
gigapanbot
,
rasin
,
architecture
,
modern
,
building
,
fred
This project by Frank Gehry in cooperation with Vlado Milunic marks the corner at the Jiraskuv Bridge. Officially named the 'Rasin Building,' soon after its conception it was dubbed 'Ginger and Fred,' as it dances like the famous couple Rogers and Astaire around the corner.
420 pictures at focal length of 400mm, ISO 200, F8, 1/200
Have a look at the building from the other side: http://gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=8834
Any commercial use or publication of the image, in whole or in part, without prior written authorization of the copyright holder is strictly prohibited.
Date Taken: August 11, 2008
Date Added: August 11, 2008
Bookmarked: 7 times
Total Views: 13748 views
Gear: GigaPanBot motorized pan/tilt head, DSLR Olympus E-520, Zuiko lens 12-60 and 70-300mm
Snapshots: 28
Size: 2.28 gigapixels
Field of View: 45.0 degrees wide, 34.8 degrees high
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August 16, 2008 14:58 | Flag as inappropriate | |
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Which program do you use for watching this huge photos after stitching? Posted by payam195r |
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August 17, 2008 15:47 | Flag as inappropriate | |
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The most easy option is to watch them on the internet, on this page, but I guess you mean watching it on the local PC. The second option is to use Microsoft's HD view, you can view the picture locally after converting it to an appropriate format. Watching it locally is much faster, specially if you want to to some demonstrations. Feel free to contact me if you need more information... Posted by gigapanbot |
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August 18, 2008 03:17 | Flag as inappropriate | |
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I mean on your local PC which programs do you use to watch them and edit them? ACD See? Photoshop? Or other programs? And which format do you usually use to save them on you local PC? Thank you, Payam Posted by payam195r |
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August 18, 2008 05:22 | Flag as inappropriate | |
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I use Photoshop for postprocessing, this is the only way to edit such large images. As save them as TIFF (max 4Gb) for uploading the file to gigapan.org and save a second copy as large PSB format. Posted by gigapanbot2 |
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August 18, 2008 10:38 | Flag as inappropriate | |
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That is what I meant, I also use Photoshop for post processing; it looks this is the only program that can handle such huge photos. Thank you for your kind description. Payam Posted by payam195r |
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August 19, 2008 16:05 | Flag as inappropriate | |
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Forgot to mention why I'm saving the second copy as PSB file. If the file exceeds 2 Gb file size (as TIFF format) , even Photoshop is not able to reopen the file anymore! This is strange because it can write TIFF files successfully up to 4 Gb. Posted by gigapanbot |
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