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In honor of the birthday of the United States of America.
The gunboat Philadelphia, lost in the Revolutionary War, sits in the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History.
From americanhistory.si.edu/news/factsheet.cfm?key=30&news...
"The Gunboat Philadelphia is the oldest surviving American fighting vessel. Built in 1776, it was sunk in Lake Champlain during a naval battle with the British in the same year. The Continental Congress authorized the building of this 54 foot, 29-ton gunboat and eight other similar vessels for the defense of the Champlain Valley - the northern frontier of the colonies considered the key to the success or failure of the American Revolution. In the summer of 1776, under the leadership of the charismatic and controversial Brigadier General Benedict Arnold, Philadelphia and her sister-ships were hurriedly organized into what historians consider “the first American Navy.”
Throughout the summer and into the fall, this small fleet imposed a strategic delay on British invasion plans to divide the colonies. On October 11, 1776, the Americans met the enemy in a hard-fought battle, but the superior firepower of the British squadron proved decisive. An hour after the initial battle ended, the badly-damaged Philadelphia sank. By the end of the three-day engagement on Oct. 13, the British had gained control of Lake Champlain, and most of the American fleet had been destroyed. Though a defeat for the Americans, the naval contest for Lake Champlain is considered the foundation for the defeat of British Commander John Burgoyne’s army at Saratoga the following year. The battle delayed the British campaign and led to the postponement of further advances. Arnold thus gave the American army time to build the strength necessary for the victory at Saratoga. Philadelphia and the other vessels in Arnold’s fleet had served their purpose."
Twelve exposures combined into four HDR images that are then stitched and blended using hugin. Colors adjusted with PS2.
See, ya damn Brits, its NOT "colours". Whose language is it anyway? It's 'mericas!
A vertical panorama attempt. Strangely enough, I could not manage to get it to work with Hugin 2010.2 beta1 and current Hugin version from hg repo, but everything works perfectly with Hugin 2010.0...
A look at the New Cathedral in Linz from a slightly unusual perspective.
single shot fisheye, rectilinear projection with hugin, color adjustment with gimp
32m tall air vent, decorated by artist Raymond Moretti with fibreglass tubes. Manhattan Square, architect: Henri Bernard, built 1976.
nice stairs, drop in mood of 1930 shnaghai style. you can watch saussage making process from the window on the wall.
hugin panorama group (china) at:
www.flickr.com/groups/love_hugin
Let's join us!
This panorama has been made from a 11s movie I shot while we were having a short break. The individual images have been extracted with QuickTime Pro, aligned and stiched with hugin
The original movie: www.flickr.com/photos/habi/4968358962/
The aligned images: www.flickr.com/photos/habi/4968340530/
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Banganga_Tank, supposed to be the center of the Hindi World, where Lakshmana shot an arrow into the ground (still visible in the middle), and water gushed forth from the ground
Stitched and fused with hugin from 3*8 images, FOV approximately 190x74°
collings foundation b24j "witchcraft" in concord, ca on 2010 June 13. fisheye projection with hugin.
film experiment project
shot on / filmet i
AmagerStrand
Copenhagen, Denmark
(by Rodrigo Benatti and Raquel Couto)
The same four shots stitched up by Microsoft ICE. ICE has very limited choice of projection - it doesn't offer the rectilinear projection I used in Hugin. Hugin does offer the cylindrical projection I used in ICE, with identical results.
But ICE was very much quicker.
Both ICE and Hugin occasionally mess up - fortunately not usually both on the same panorama.