View allAll Photos Tagged equirectangular,
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A panorama showing the Spanish Moss during the Christmas show at the Lamberton Conservatory.
View this panorama in the interactive viewer.
(This will open a new window to SPi-V, an interactive panorama viewer created by Aldo and hosted at fieldofview.com. Requires Adobe Shockwave.)
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 Student Apartments, which can vary in terms of size, configuration, and finish.
L'inspiration vient d'une vielle réalisation de Sébastien Perez-Duarte (sbprzd pour Flickr).
Chaque sphère est porteuse d'un panorama complet (en projection équirectangulaire) parmi ceux réalisés depuis 2010.
view it on fieldofview SPi-V
Working on equirectangular photos for ages, so I went out today to make preperations for making one.
Maybe it isn't a real good one but it come close. Have to practice more :)
summary:
Nikon D300,Tokina 10-17mm,tripod,Iso100,1/60,F8,16 photos.
Draft product - spherical (equirectangular) panorama of the Waterfall area of Fossil Creek, Arizona near Camp Verde. Unfortunately, I didn't manage to activate the shutter on the down-nadir shot (waterfall is loud, so I couldn't hear if the shutter released). Setup includes Nodal Ninja 4 pan head and Manfrotto tripod with ball head.
This is the equirectangular projection from the same set of images as the planetoid previously posted. You can just see the tripod in the bottom of the images, I cloned it out of the final planet image.