awfulsteelmelon
Farmhouse urbex (spherical)
That's a fairly old one, from the year I started doing these kinds of panoramas actually. I couldn't resist to redo this, it is really nice to see that, and how much better I can do things now, with the exact same sources. Still plenty of issies here though.
I guess everybody has their own reasons, but I was always drawn to this type of exploration, I dig industrial stuff for sure, but seeing how people were living in the area I come from just a couple of decades ago totally creeps me out. Being there, it almost gets too real at times. This bulding does not exist anymore, man, I wish I had taken more photos, there was some amazing stuff in there, "locked" rooms with furniture, daily utensils, almost untouched, religious iconography, old photos etc.
Usually only a few rooms had stone walls or some kind of isolation and heating (kitchen, sleeping quarters), most of the rest, just wood planks with the wind blowing through all year long. Often the basement was a stable for animals (have some stories from my childhood regarding that), or cellar with no foundation, just earth (which is not a bad idea; for temperature / humidity regulation and storing vegetables, fruits over winter etc.).
The chalk letters at the top of the turquoise door, not sure if it's visible here on Flickr, is something they did (and still do) in Catholicism around new year, and in my original file, I think the date says 1980.
Technically, that's a sperical panorama consisting of 11 individual images, with an equirectangular projection yielding ~54,3MP, 10444 x 5222px.
Nikon D90 (APS-C crop sensor / DX)
Samyang 8mm f/3.5 UMC FE CSII
ISO200, 8mm, f/3.5, 0,6sec
(thus 12mm full frame equivalent)
tripod with panorama head, remote
Farmhouse urbex (spherical)
That's a fairly old one, from the year I started doing these kinds of panoramas actually. I couldn't resist to redo this, it is really nice to see that, and how much better I can do things now, with the exact same sources. Still plenty of issies here though.
I guess everybody has their own reasons, but I was always drawn to this type of exploration, I dig industrial stuff for sure, but seeing how people were living in the area I come from just a couple of decades ago totally creeps me out. Being there, it almost gets too real at times. This bulding does not exist anymore, man, I wish I had taken more photos, there was some amazing stuff in there, "locked" rooms with furniture, daily utensils, almost untouched, religious iconography, old photos etc.
Usually only a few rooms had stone walls or some kind of isolation and heating (kitchen, sleeping quarters), most of the rest, just wood planks with the wind blowing through all year long. Often the basement was a stable for animals (have some stories from my childhood regarding that), or cellar with no foundation, just earth (which is not a bad idea; for temperature / humidity regulation and storing vegetables, fruits over winter etc.).
The chalk letters at the top of the turquoise door, not sure if it's visible here on Flickr, is something they did (and still do) in Catholicism around new year, and in my original file, I think the date says 1980.
Technically, that's a sperical panorama consisting of 11 individual images, with an equirectangular projection yielding ~54,3MP, 10444 x 5222px.
Nikon D90 (APS-C crop sensor / DX)
Samyang 8mm f/3.5 UMC FE CSII
ISO200, 8mm, f/3.5, 0,6sec
(thus 12mm full frame equivalent)
tripod with panorama head, remote