File :-(, x, )
Anonymous
Taken while i was storm chasing. Panorama made from three shots. Comments?
>> Anonymous
very nice, what kind of camera? Not that the camera will change my opinion on the photo, which is what i see alot of on these boards.
>> Anonymous
png for photos is fail.
>> Anonymous
>>44016
Signed.
>> Anonymous
Try keeping the same settings for all photos in your panorama...
>> Anonymous
>>44026
It looks like he did.
>> Anonymous
but he failed, look at the clouds at 1/3 from the right
>> Anonymous
Where I live storms come to you, no need to chase them.
>> Anonymous
>>44028
Yeah. it's raining over there. That's why the clouds look different. Look at the ground - same exposure throughout.
>> Anonymous
To answer the questions: The settings were the same in all 3 photos. Manual exposure on a canon 30D. The front was laying down rain and hail the size of marbles in the left 1/3 of the image which is why its all hazy looking. Its in PNG because its best way IMHO to export from raw to web format without losing the vibrance of the colors.

Oddly enough, while chasing it I drove through all that rain and hail, but when i turned around to go back through it, it was all sunny... I hate indiana weather.
>> Anonymous
my canon powershot has a setting especially for doing this.... its neat
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
>>44080
i did this at six flags magic mountain... i did a full 360, but the rest is boring.

Camera-Specific Properties:Camera SoftwareAdobe Photoshop CS2 WindowsImage-Specific Properties:Image OrientationTop, Left-HandHorizontal Resolution200 dpiVertical Resolution200 dpiImage Created2007:04:29 01:03:55Color Space InformationsRGBImage Width2780Image Height364
>> Anonymous
>>44077"Its in PNG because its best way IMHO to export from raw to web format without losing the vibrance of the colors."

Just an FYI: This honestly isn't the best idea in the world, because the browsers do not render PNG colours the same. Doing web design layouts for years, this has been a pain for me to match PNG colours to web colour, as IE and FF will represent them differently.

If you want good colour representation on the web, I'd personally recomend converting the image over to an sRGB profile, and saving as a JPG. The main reason why colours are lost on the web with JPGs is because some cameras use colour profiles that the web browsers do not support (such as my Canon 350D saving to Adobe RGB), and when viewed in a web browser, they appear washed out. So simply convert it over to a sRGB profile, and alls good when uploading to web!
>> Anonymous
>>44090
Did not know that. Thanks!
>> Anonymous
>>44090
Also, png doesn't have exif tags. Maybe later?
>> Anonymous
what kind of camera do you use for that, OP?
>> haroO
>>44081
I CAME