View allAll Photos Tagged miniplanets
This was created from a 180 degree fisheye taken pointing the lenst straight up. PS was used. The image was converted from polar to rectangular, then turned 180 degrees, then converted from rectangular to polar again. The planet completely disappears in the center, which I don't quite like. Well, who likes the planet disappearing into a black hole? Also the tree that was straight overhead has been smeared all over the edge. Actually think I'll delete this image! But easy it was, compared to the creation of miniplanet panoramas.
Abbaye Saint-Etienne de Bassac (Charente) - France
Abbaye bénédictine fondée au tout début du XIe siècle
360° stereographic panorama
8 pictures on tripod (6 pictures + 1 for zenith + 1 for nadir)
this miniplanet is a collaboration between me and Foto_di_Signorina www.flickr.com/photos/amarcord69/
see comments for the original shot
Le Chateau de La Rochefoucaud (Charente) - France. 360° stereographic panorama
8 pictures on tripod (6 pictures + 1 for zenith + 1 for nadir)
Le plus imposant château de Charente et un des joyaux de la Renaissance
Mini-Planet of Fort Worth, shot (mostly) from the upper end of Main Street, just below the courthouse. I got lucky and there was some construction blocking off half of Main, so I was able to place my tripod inside the protected area, nearly in the middle of the road.
Keep moving lads ... keep moving
Don't huddle on this beach
Don't make yourselves a target
For those guns up there to reach
Keep moving lads ... keep moving
There's the seawall ... over there
Keep moving lads ... keep moving
Don't falter ... or despair
Don't look ... at comrades falling
Around you ... everywhere
Keep moving lads ... keep moving
We can take this ... on the chin
Keep moving ... and keep praying
Before those guns ... they zero in.
Panoramic photo taken inside Alnwick Castle in northumberland, the home of the Percy family. Captured with a Samsung Galaxy S3.
Click on this link for a flash-based immersive view of the panorama from fieldofview.com.
This photo is from the mediterrean sea in the coast of Malta, in the photo we can see Sliema, Valletta and Paceville.
Le jardin du Facteur Cheval saintongeais, Gabriel Albert.
Ce jardin est peuplé de centaines de statues (202) et bustes (186), de taille humaine, réalisés entre 1969 et 1989 par l'habitant de cette maison du hameau de Chez Audebert à Nantillé - Charente Maritime - Poitou Charentes (France). Durant vingt années, cet "habitant-paysagiste" a créé son univers poétique sur ce petit rectangle de terre et réalisé son rêve de sculpteur-modeleur ; il a construit, aménagé et transformé son espace domestique en une œuvre singulière.
This garden contains hundreds of statues (202) and busts (186), human scale, made between 1969 and 1989 by the owner of this house - Chez Audebert - Nantillé - Charente Maritime - Poitou Charentes (France). During twenty years, Mr. Albert created his poetic universe and realized his dream of sculptor-modeller and has built, developed and transformed its domestic space in a singular work.
360° stereographic panorama
8 pictures on tripod (6 pictures + 1 for zenith + 1 for nadir)
Version équirectangulaire à voir en réalité virtuelle avec Spi-V viewer - See it in VR panorama with an immersive experience: SPi-V viewer.
Stitched Panorama
today was a very hdrish, eye catching, postoprducting, saturating day. some new experiments with hdr, and 2 huge miniplanets, with hdr and a lot of shots :D
The Piazza Duomo (dome square) in Parma. This planet was made with panini starting from this equirectangular image.
You could also see this photo in immersive view.
Hondarribia - Pays Basque - Espagne.
360° stereographic panorama
8 pictures on tripod (6 pictures + 1 for zenith + 1 for nadir)
L'Isle sur la Sorgue - Provence (Vaucluse) - France
360° stereographic panorama. 9 pictures on tripod with Nodal Ninja 5 (6 pictures + 1 for zenith + 2 for nadir)
I went out today to shoot panorama's for a "miniplanet workshop" I'll be giving to fellow students of the Photography shool I attend.
This is one of three squares in Roermond I shot.
Hondarribia - Pays Basque - Espagne.
Plaza de Armas
360° stereographic panorama
8 pictures on tripod (6 pictures + 1 for zenith + 1 for nadir)
My first attempt at a mini planet. The original photo is of a paraglider soaring above Europe's largest sand dune at Pyla, France.
Panorámica estereográfica desde 'el trono', en Riglos.
## immersive view / vista 3D ## (6000*3000px) 11Mb
taken from Génos watchtower, Hautes-Pyrénées, France. The tower dates back to the late 13th century. 27 images stitched together to make this planetoid.
I'm so sorry guys, but in a couple of days i will leave rome, and finally go to vacation, and return on the alps, in my homeland in the north of italy. So all my force discipline about posting cannot be respected, and i need to upload a lot of photos, because i want to leave with all the old and already postproduces photos online, ready to start a new era of photographic experience in one of the most beautiful places of italy (and probably the europe). So enjoy all this huge amount of shots, for now i've uploaded only the abstract architectures i've done the last month, coming soon all the other shots (lots of hdr, miniplanets and various other styles). For this bunch of photos there are 53 to look at, sorted randomly, so i don't know if you like that one or other :) i'm courious to see if all this 53 photos will have at least i view tomorrow :D
Halle de Villefranche du Périgord - Dordogne (France). XIIè siècle. Central market place of Villefranche du Périgord. 360° stereographic panorama
8 pictures on tripod with Nodal Ninja 5 (6 pictures + 1 for zenith + 1 for nadir) and 1 extra picture handheld for nadir
Mini-planet without filter: www.flickr.com/photos/colink/5485729456/
Original source panorama: www.flickr.com/photos/colink/5485727950/
The basics of creating a mini-planet (the “Polar Panorama Effect”) in Photoshop are actually pretty easy:
1. Rotate the image 180 degrees
2. Run Filter -> Distort -> Polar Coordinates
3. Resize the image so it's a square.
Done!
The tricky part, of course, is coming up with the right source image. 360 degree panoramas look best - you want something where the left and right sides stitch together, so repeating the start and end image and then trimming appropriately will give you the right effect. Of course, some people don't mind the weird stitch that a non-360 panorama will give you, it's up to you.
The second tricky part is cleaning up afterward - cleaning up the seems if your image wasn't match properly on the left-right edges, and cleaning up the center. Haven't quite worked out the best techniques for that - with the right super-wide or fisheye panorama, the center can merge nicely - but for this image just airbrushing some green over the weird pointy bit in the center worked out pretty well.
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For this image, I felt it was still missing a certain something (the original source image wasn't particularly inspired...), so I added a cartoony look with the Photoshop OilPaint Pixel Bender filter to give it a bit more life.
Un point de vue stéréographique de la Cimetière militaire britannique de Bayeux, France.
A stereographic view of the Bayeux Commonwealth War Graves Commission
Check out my webpageCemetery, France.
This is a 28 portrait frame 360 degree panorama of Robin Hoods Bay. Sadly it didn't stitch together too well (I think I need some lessons) and I had a real job making it into a planet. This is only my second attempt at these crazy images and it’s clear that there is so much to learn. Nevertheless, they are fun to do.
Disney Concert Hall in Downtown LA
For prints visit me on Fine Art America: natasha-bishop.artistwebsites.com/