Ontario Legislature HDR Panorama (rectilinear)
Quoting from the usually-reliable Wikipedia:
The Ontario Legislature, also known as the Ontario Legislative Building, is the building that houses the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in Toronto, Ontario. The building sits in the middle of Queen's Park, south of Wellesley Street, on the former site of King's College (which later became the University of Toronto). The land is leased from the university to the province on a 999-year term, for a peppercorn payment of $1 per annum. The building, and by extension the provincial government, are frequently referred to as "Queen's Park".
Designed by architect Richard A. Waite, the five-storey building, completed in 1893, was constructed of pink-hued Ontario sandstone. Waite employed the Richardsonian Romanesque style, taking advantage of the iron frame construction to devote an uncharacteristically large area to windows. One tower was originally intended to hold a clock, but it was never installed and a rose window was built instead.
I made this panorama by shooting 18 images as six sets of three (exposure-bracketed +/- 2 ev), then running them through Hugin. I let Hugin pick the alignment points between images, but hand-selected horizontal and vertical lines. I decided to use High Dynamic Range because the snow was so bright and I didn’t want to lose the details there (even if they were mostly footprints)—this is the output produced by enfuse.
This is a rectilinear projection. The statues to the side are noticably distorted, but the legislative building itself looks quite nice.
Location: Queen’s Park, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Ontario Legislature HDR Panorama (rectilinear)
Quoting from the usually-reliable Wikipedia:
The Ontario Legislature, also known as the Ontario Legislative Building, is the building that houses the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in Toronto, Ontario. The building sits in the middle of Queen's Park, south of Wellesley Street, on the former site of King's College (which later became the University of Toronto). The land is leased from the university to the province on a 999-year term, for a peppercorn payment of $1 per annum. The building, and by extension the provincial government, are frequently referred to as "Queen's Park".
Designed by architect Richard A. Waite, the five-storey building, completed in 1893, was constructed of pink-hued Ontario sandstone. Waite employed the Richardsonian Romanesque style, taking advantage of the iron frame construction to devote an uncharacteristically large area to windows. One tower was originally intended to hold a clock, but it was never installed and a rose window was built instead.
I made this panorama by shooting 18 images as six sets of three (exposure-bracketed +/- 2 ev), then running them through Hugin. I let Hugin pick the alignment points between images, but hand-selected horizontal and vertical lines. I decided to use High Dynamic Range because the snow was so bright and I didn’t want to lose the details there (even if they were mostly footprints)—this is the output produced by enfuse.
This is a rectilinear projection. The statues to the side are noticably distorted, but the legislative building itself looks quite nice.
Location: Queen’s Park, Toronto, Ontario, Canada