View allAll Photos Tagged Equirectangular
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www.fieldofview.com/flickr/?page=photos/ppopp/3029771768/
あんま意味ないかも
もっと工夫が必要
I need more my own invention.
One of my favorite 360 pans. Taken at Blue Mound state park near Luverne Minnesnowta. 80 foot tall rock climbing face which is HUUUUUUUUGE for around this area as the other large hills are the cow dung piles.
For the best viewing experience check this interactive site thonepc.com/Pans/BmpClimbers/
For better experience, download 'Original' and use standalone viewer like FSPViewer ( www.fsoft.it/FSPViewer )
It's a small camera sensor, so the quality is gonna suffer in low light. Plus, it depends on how you select the in-camera stitching, near or far. Enlarge it, and spin it around with your mouse.
Image Disclaimer - Please note that all of the images shown are for illustrative purposes only. The rooms pictured are not necessarily typical of the accommodation available at Murano Street, which can vary in terms of size, configuration, and finish.
This set of equirectangular images features of Replica of the Nao Santa Maria, Christopher Columbus's famous flagship docked in the port of Fuengirola (Malaga).
Image Disclaimer - Please note that all of the images shown are for illustrative purposes only. The rooms pictured are not necessarily typical of the accommodation available at Queen Margaret, which can vary in terms of size, configuration, and finish.
This is an equirectangular panorama, stitched from 7 shots.
Quick Time Virtual panorama
Equirectangular panorama built from 32 pictures (EXIF data from the first one).
See also its stereographic projection.
Image Disclaimer - Please note that all of the images shown are for illustrative purposes only. The rooms pictured are not necessarily typical of the accommodation available at Murano Street, which can vary in terms of size, configuration, and finish.
Quick and dirty handheld spherical pan with new full frame fisheye lens, no other post processing (so it looks pretty flat and blah). Only small empty spaces in sky and ground (straight up/down shots did not stitch in well). This is very promising - only slight stitching error caused by one of the images being blurry (handheld in low light). I also experimented with locking the focus/exposure - I should have learned to that a long time ago. I'm very happy with how fast I could acquire the pics for this (I did 12 - 4 looking up with bottom of frame on horizon, 4 down with top of frame on horizon, and 4 with horizon vertically centered). With a bit of practice, I could crank these out on a tripod with the spherical pan head pretty quickly.