Have you been to the Haliburton Look out?
Tegan
This is a discussion on Panoramic Shooting within the General photography forums, part of the Photography & Fine art photography category; Have you been to the Haliburton Look out? Tegan...
Have you been to the Haliburton Look out?
Tegan
no...common tegan... throw me a bone here.... i know you got the mad skilz...
I don't know anything about Gimp...sorry.
But your approach seems ok to me - try to keep the tripod level as you suggest.
You need to choose the best lens for the shot (of your 2 lenses the zoom is most likely) - only you know what that is when you get to your scene and check out the framing.
I'd also leave room for cropping so I'd 'overframe' the scene by maybe 5-10%
Good luck - hope that helps...and love to see some shots!
best!
marko
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Here is the plugin for Gimp to do Panoramas. If you looking for any plugins try Sourceforge first one of the best sites for opensource apps and ad ons. All the documentation is included.
http://stitchpanorama.sourceforge.net/
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AcadieLibre - thanks for the link.. I downloaded a panoramic script last night but this plug in looks much better
Marko - Generally speaking is there a focal setting that captures the most detail? For example.. let's say I have framed my shot and 55mm is ideal.... which lens would produce a better result.... 55mm wide open on the 18-55 or 55mm tight on the 55-200mm... generally speaking..
Should I consider locking the the exposure and focus settings to provide consistancy across the frames?
thanks
Last edited by Travis; 04-05-2008 at 10:49 AM.
Important question: What camera and lens are you intending to use?
Camera-wise it would be helpful to use either a compact superzoom or a DSLR with live view to see differences in exposure through the LCD screen in preview mode. Can you do that with your camera?
Are you talking about shooting this with a wide angle zoom or more in the 50mm normal range? Wide angle flattens perspective and gives a shot less of a 3D look. It also makes hills look much smaller when shooting from above.
Have you planned when you are going to go to get the best weather and best lighting? How are you going to handle haze in look-out shots that deadens and distorts colours?
Your camera on automatic will not have the same reading for all the shots. How are you planning to get the look of perfectly matched exposures? After stitching together the panorama, postprocessing and editing will be necessary to perfectly match the shots. The sky will be a challenge too.
The mechanics of setting up the tripod, shooting the images, and using any of the several pieces of software to stitch them together are fairly straightforward. Unfortunately however there are all kinds of individual considerations that relate to any potential panorama that need to be considered and planned for, as well as postprocessing skill and experience. Even with all this, the challenge is to get something better than what would be achieved with one of those disposable panorama cameras.
You have the advantage of being able to go back to the lookout to remedy any mistakes that you made in the first one. So the best thing to do is experiment. The challenge will be to recognize from the photo what could have been done better.
Good luck and make sure you post some results.![]()
Tegan
Last edited by tegan; 04-05-2008 at 12:04 PM.
If by detail you mean sharpness, in my experience every lens will be different at different focal lengths and at different apertures.....but I'm unclear as to what you mean exactly by 'detail'.Marko - Generally speaking is there a focal setting that captures the most detail? For example.. let's say I have framed my shot and 55mm is ideal.... which lens would produce a better result.... 55mm wide open on the 18-55 or 55mm tight on the 55-200mm... generally speaking..
Should I consider locking the the exposure and focus settings to provide consistancy across the frames?
I would try to lock exposure and focus but that will only work well if the whole scene (as divided by the amount of shots you will take to create the panorama) is about the same exposure. You may well have to do a bit of tweaking in Gimp.
Hope that helps,
Marko
- Please connect with me further
Photo tours of Montreal - Private photography courses
- Join the new Photography.ca Facebook page
- Follow me on Twitter http://twitter.com/markokulik
- Follow me on Google+ https://plus.google.com/u/0/111159185852360398018/posts
- Check out the photography podcast
"You have to milk the cow quite a lot, and get plenty of milk to get a little cheese." Henri Cartier-Bresson from The Decisive Moment.
Thanks everyone for your help.
My attempts to capture lions lookout weren't very successful. The prime views all had major distractions in the form of trees impeding the shot. I had to settle for a lower spot without obstruction. Unfortunatly this spot cuts off a body of water that i wanted in the panoramic shot.
The scene was pretty bad... nothing in the sky.. not much colour on the ground. Would surely be a better shot in the bloom of spring with a few clouds and a sunset. It was really windy... this was a problem... the surface was really uneven... this was a problem... it was so bright that reviewing pictures to adjust white balance was impossible. Locking in the exposure in a medium zone didn't work out very well... I used a remote to prevent further shake but it seems the camera won't autofocus when using remote so the shots seem out of focus.
I used Gimp to stitch them together and found it rather difficult at first (or maybe it was the wine).. but got the hang of it.... Other than stitching and masking I didn't make any other post adjustments... The difference in colour is from white balance settings.. the warmer shot is using the "Cloudy" default (I prefer the warm one)... and the blue one is using the "direct sunlight" default..
Overall I'm not impressed with these shots but it was a learning experience so this is good. The shot with the dog shows where the pic's were taken (this shot is not meant to be critiqued). Please give me your input so I may learn. Thanks.
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