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Hugin Pano fr 5 images, default settings. Hand panned with older point and shoot.

Lonar Lake (Marathi: लोणार सरोवर) is a saline soda lake located at Lonar in Buldana district, Maharashtra, India, which was created by a meteor impact during the Pleistocene Epoch.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lonar_crater

Panorama from the Revie Stand

On the Springwater Trail between the Tacoma underpass & the Espee/Tri-Met overpass.

A full double rainbow in Burghausen, Bavaria. The secondary rainbow is just faintly visible, and I just missed the top... The image is composed of three captures, stitched together using Hugin (rectangular projection).

Weil Panorama kaputte Kabel...

You can see it interactively from the inside here (needs shockwave).

 

Taken from the Southbank promenade.

The view down onto the Sails Pavillon of the San Diego Convention Center, where most of the Posters of the ATS2009 have been shown.

 

Stitched from 59 (!) photos, since I didn't have my wide-angle lens with me. Panini Projection.

Epirectangular pano. about 75 photos.

I thought that this would come out a lot better than it did (this is an amazing place!)......but I still think it looks ok.

 

You can see the stereographic projection (tiny planet) here:

www.flickr.com/photos/digitalysed/4542909165/

The view of the fire from McDrurys Road, Ladbrooks.

panorama ottenuto con hugin da 2 foto scattate con fz8 e raynox dcr6600 pro

Bournemouth, stitched using Hugin, using hand-held photographs from a Canon 6D.

It was the fifth day of my holiday, and I decided to walk up the huge hill overlooking Woolacombe to see what the view was like. The weather had been getting a bit cloudy and it had rained in the night, so I wrapped up and set off, up Rockfield Road and turned right and headed up the hill. I saw some cattle on the way up, (bullocks, probably just one year old - I have no idea) who were on the other side of the hill, and who moved off when they saw me. I stuck to the edge of the heather to avoid walking directly towards them, and carried on up the hill, until I came to a point where the heather narrowed to a cul de sac and I was forced to turn around and go a bit, towards the cattle who had come round behind me. This seemed to worry them a bit, and they ran up over the crest of the hill. I walked back until I found a path to go up the hill again, and found a nice flat spot to stop and take a few photos, which I stitched into this panorama. This is 235 degrees wide horizontally, and 33 degrees vertically, and was made from about 11 shots.

 

Anyway, the rain had really started to fall by now, and the window for taking pictures was closing, so I put the camera away, put the waterproof pouch back over the bag and went to walk down the hill, only to see that having run up over the top of the hill, the cattle had come back down around behind me. I tried walking to the left to see if they would move away to the right, but no, this time they just stood there looking at me. I spent a lot of time on my grandparents farm as a kid, and I never liked walking around with livestock, as some of them them combine curiosity with stupidity, and weighing a lot. These cattle were not very big, but they might just have weighed twice what I weigh (230 lbs) so I wasn't going to annoy them on a slippery hillside. I turned and walked up the hill, into the increasingly torrential rain, and now the bloody things began following me, shoulder to shoulder, up the increasingly narrow path in the heather. I prayed this would not be another blind avenue, and thankfully it narrowed to a single track path, crested a rise and turned into a rocky shale path down into a field. Praying once more that this was not the way to their field, I walked down, trying not to look back too often. The lead animal stopped at the crest of the path, and watched me as I slipped and scrambled down towards a gate at the bottom of the hill. I got home about half an hour later, in what was now a complete cloudburst, soaked to the skin.

 

Full size is 7K by 1K, large is 1024 x 145, so do try the big one to see anything.

2 sets of 3 shots between +/- 0.7 ev, but without any adjustment ot enhance tone mapping or hdr effects

a bit better but doesn't lend itself to a nice crop

Sector No. 2 "Trascastillo Oeste", con una superficie de 16.600 m2 y uso residencial. Fue aprobado Definitivamente el 9 de Octubre de 1989 y ha sido modificado con fecha 24 de Mayo de 1993. La ordenación prevista insiste en el uso residencial con tipologías unifamiliares en la Avenida de la Frontera y en la C/Vega, considerando suelo destinado a vivienda colectiva el área comprendida entre la C/ Almaraz y la Calle de nueva apertura, con edificación de hasta tres plantas. El número de viviendas previsto para cada una de las tipologías respeta las determinaciones del Plan General, y son 28 viviendas unifamiliares y 50 colectivas.

Sector No. 3 "Trascastillo Este". Sector residencial con una superficie de 24.600 m2 con Plan Parcial definitivamente aprovado mediante Acuerdo plenario de 24 de marzo de 1999 con una cesión de suelo efectuada de la primera fase del sistema general de Huerta de la Frontera del 54,5%

 

De "Revisión del Plan General de Ordenación Urbana de Zamora". Memoria. Aprobación definitiva 2001

Early morning shot of Toronto (panorama with Hugin)

depuis la colline de Gediminas, Vilnius, Lituanie

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Looking into Kanangra Gorge from Mt Berry

 

Panorama created with Hugin.

Somewhere along the climb toward Snoqualmie Tunnel on the fourth day of the trip.

Went for a bit of a holiday at a little farm property near Daylesford. It started raining and I we saw this.

 

Brightest rainbow we had ever seen in our lives, and also first time we could see the whole arc. The storm passed, and it was all over in less in a few minutes.

 

I don't usually 'do' landscapes or panoramas stitches but I had no other way of capturing this moment.

 

I just chucked it into Hugin, messed around a bit and this came out, then dodged/burned a bit in photoshop.

from... actually I don't remember where it's from, probably somewhere near Vaucluse.

Panorama dalla terrazza di San Petronio

vu depuis la route du col du Chat

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