View allAll Photos Tagged Equirectangular

Equirectangular panorama.

View this panorama in the interactive viewer. (Flash Player required.)

 

Stitching of 22 photos (11mm - 30s - f/2.8 - ISO 250).

RAW editor : DXO PL 2

Stitcher : Hugin

Post editing : Photoshop CS6

Tamala station, camping fishing etc in Shark bay

On the grounds of Schönbrunn Palace in Vienna, Austria

Photo Credit: Chris Berry's arm

Burlington, Colorado, Old Town Museum

 

Update Jun 29, 2011: Higher res, better antialiasing, changed sky to sky-blue (essentially converging on an ideal image with this one.)

 

A test pattern for you all to use at your discretion. The point of view is taken from 3 units above the plane.

 

Interactive viewer here

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).

Wait a moment for 360˚ interactivity to load. Once loaded it's possible to click and drag to navigate around the panorama.

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jack toolin | instagram | facebook

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This is part of my 3rd Ave Corridor project documenting the people, businesses and landscape of this mixed-use (residential/industrial) neighborhood. I predict it will soon be transformed by gentrification, filling in this rough waterfront condos, dog runs, cafes and beneficiaries of the finance and tech sectors.

An older drawing -- just wanted to see it in the viewer.

IMG_20211207_085638_00_001.insp

Someone on Facebook asked me how I could love the architectures designed Frank Gehry as well as Norman Foster. He sees them in different genres because they follow very different methods of construction, but I see them as the same—as pure expression of forms. While Gehry’s architecture is sculpturally organic and Foster’s designs feature very geometric compositions, they are ultimately about the beauty of forms. My art education from Yale is based in Bauhaus, so perhaps my appreciation of forms differs from his Harvard GSD background.

 

This is a handheld panorama of Terminal 1 at the Hong Kong International Airport (HKG). It was stitched together using nine 6D full-res RAW captures with the 17-40. I still haven’t bought a pano head yet so parallax is a bit of an issue, but I am planning on getting one any day now.

 

My mom saw some panorama shots I took recently and asked me if it was a single shot because I have been raving about the super wide angle I was able to achieve with the 17-40 + full frame 6D body. No—a full frame body cannot really achieve wider than 180-degree shots—perhaps a fish eye lens can but I do not yet have one. 8-15 f/4L looks good, will do some research perhaps.

 

# SML Data

+ Date: 2013-04-25T06:22:08+0800

+ Dimensions: 5622 x 2575

+ Exposure: 1/30 sec at f/8.0

+ Focal Length: 17 mm

+ ISO: 400-640

+ Flash: Did not fire

+ Camera: Canon EOS 6D

+ Lens: Canon EF 17-40mm f/4L USM

+ Panorama FOV: 190 degree horizontal, 154 degree vertical

+ Panoramic Projection: Equirectangular

+ GPS: 22°18'52" N 113°56'11" E

+ Location: Terminal 1, 香港國際機場 Hong Kong International Airport (HKG)

+ Workflow: Hugin 2012, Lightroom 4

+ Serial: SML.20130425.6D.02842-SML.20130425.6D.02850-Pano.Equirectangular.190x154

+ Series: 建築 Architecture, 形 Forms, 全景攝影 Panoramic Photography

 

# Media Licensing

Creative Commons (CCBY) See-ming Lee 李思明 / SML Photography / SML Universe Limited

 

“香港國際機場一號客運大樓 Terminal One, Hong Kong International Airport (HKG)” / 香港旅遊建築全景之形 Hong Kong Travel Architecture Panoramic Forms / SML.20130425.6D.02842-SML.20130425.6D.02850-Pano.Equirectangular.190x154

/ #建築 #建筑 #Architecture #形 #Forms #SMLForms #全景 #Pano #SMLPano #CreativeCommons #CCBY #SMLPhotography #SMLUniverse #SMLProjects

/ #中國 #中国 #China #香港 #HongKong #攝影 #摄影 #photography #城市 #Urban #機場 #Airport #NormanFoster

IMG_20211207_114140_00_021.insp

IMG_20211207_100353_00_003.insp

This is not displaying properly or at least in my browser. It should be able to rotate. I know I can get still images to rotate properly in Flickr but apparently not video. At least not time lapse.

Experiment in merging several panoramas acquired over the course of a few hours. Six pans from sunset through dusk and twilight and into a dark (moonlit night) were stitched in PTGui, then combined in Photoshop, highlighting the mountains in the setting sun, and the starry sky and Fuller Fire (at the North Rim of the Grand Canyon) in the dark of night.

 

It was an experiment, and there are flaws (windy weather, early moonrise, shortcuts in the Photoshop processing, etc.). The main point of the exercise was to figure out the basics of the process. Because the tripod shifted a small amount during the evening, I treated the sets as non-linked HDR exposures. Unfortunately, PTGui wanted to merge the photos with similar exosures (i.e., the night shots) into a single blend plane, so I ended up exporting each of the six panoramas separately. It did do a beautiful job of aligning each set of shots so I could stack them in Photoshop for the final edits.

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