awfulsteelmelon
More shrubbery (infrared)
This is more for good measure, or lets say reference: it's not quite but very close to 180° angle of view, and the few branches that are blurry are almost touching the camera, the rest, surprisingly in focus. Little bit of a tunnel vision, even though it's just a couple of meters.
As I wrote somewhere, I also ditched my 'hybrid focus' approach (used to focus the bottom row a bit closer) by accident one could say: I did a panorama on the edge of a cliff / slope where part of the bottom row was half ground half infinity, so I did both settings an compared, and ..well. Better late than never, this makes it also simpler now.
Source for this pano is a ~200° field of view, 33 piece, ~343,8MP mercator projection, down to 8:5 with 17612 x 11008px.
Nikon D90 (APS-C, fullspectrum mod)
Tamron 10-24mm f/3.5-4.5 Di ll VC HLD
Hoya R72 (720nm infrared pass-filter)
ISO200, 24mm, f/6.3, 1/2sec
(therefore 36mm full frame equivalent)
tripod, panorama head, remote (ML-L3)
More shrubbery (infrared)
This is more for good measure, or lets say reference: it's not quite but very close to 180° angle of view, and the few branches that are blurry are almost touching the camera, the rest, surprisingly in focus. Little bit of a tunnel vision, even though it's just a couple of meters.
As I wrote somewhere, I also ditched my 'hybrid focus' approach (used to focus the bottom row a bit closer) by accident one could say: I did a panorama on the edge of a cliff / slope where part of the bottom row was half ground half infinity, so I did both settings an compared, and ..well. Better late than never, this makes it also simpler now.
Source for this pano is a ~200° field of view, 33 piece, ~343,8MP mercator projection, down to 8:5 with 17612 x 11008px.
Nikon D90 (APS-C, fullspectrum mod)
Tamron 10-24mm f/3.5-4.5 Di ll VC HLD
Hoya R72 (720nm infrared pass-filter)
ISO200, 24mm, f/6.3, 1/2sec
(therefore 36mm full frame equivalent)
tripod, panorama head, remote (ML-L3)