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The Viking Ship Hugin on permanent display on the cliff top at Pegwell Bay, Ramsgate is a replica of a Viking ship which sailed from Denmark to Thanet in 1949 to celebrate the 1500th anniversary of the invasion of Britain, the traditional landing of Hengist and Horsa and the bethrothal of Hengist's daughter, Rowena, to King Vortigen of Kent.
Out of 53 crewmen only the navigator, Peter Jensen, was a professional seaman. Viking conditions were faithfully observed and the only instrument carried was a sextant. The 'Hugin' was offered as a gift to Ramsgate and Broadstairs by the Daily Mail in order to be preserved for centuries.
A panorama photo created with hugin, result of 5 photo's stitched together.
The photo's where taken near Harmelen (small town nearby Utrecht)
A crop of the last photo showing a small portion of the surface shipping traffic off the coast of Sentosa island in Singapore.
The sheer volume of shipping passing through Singapore is mind boggling.
[gl] The Wave, en Coyote Buttes North, é un pequeno espazo de areiscas excavado e pulido pola auga e o vento, de formas onduladas e colores cálidos, tan irreal que é imposible imaxinar algo así antes de telo visto.
[en] The Wave, at Coyote Buttes North, is a little space of sandstone carved and pulished by water and wind, undulating forms and warm colors, so unreal that it is impossible to imagine something like this before have seen it.
deviaxe.blogspot.com.es/2012/07/ondas-de-pedra-no-deserto...
York Minster. This is a photomontage of the gothic western facade (8 photos taken less than 100 yards from the building itself and stictched together using hugin and emblend). Note the little person in the foreground shadows (right of centre) who gives some scale of this medieval masterpiece.
The Cuyahoga River flowing through Water Works park on its way to Akron and Lake Erie.
Thirty exposures combined to create 10 HDR images that were then stitched with hugin create this 12,421 x 3401 px panorama.
Panorama which shows parts of my home town and the surrounding area. Created with a great panorama tool called "Hugin", running on Ubuntu Linux.
As you can see, the weather really sucked and I did have neither a tripod nor much time. On the original pictures the ground was much too dark, so I twisted the curves in GIMP which created some kind of a pseudo-HDR effect.
To be honest I think I am improving little by little. I like the lights and the atmosphere and the steep walls all the way up to the ceiling. The next time I have to avoid the parallax errors and then I concentrate on patching the zenith/nadir.
The originally wooden church was built in 1351. From 1396 they started building the stone church over the wooden one and finished it in 1420. The dutch prince William of Orange was one of the founding fathers of the Netherlands and led the resistance against the spanish occupation from Delft. After his assassination in 1584 he was buried in this church. This pano is taken close to his mausoleum. Since then, the Nieuwe Kerk has been the last resting-place for the members of the Royal House. See for more historical info here.
Enjoy this panorama with the Interactive viewer ( Adobe Shockwave plug-in required)
This panorama was taken from a tripod with 34 pictures and stitched and enblended in Hugin. The zenith and nadir were messed up in Photofiltre ;-)