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Panoramas Mav !zx2K/XTtpo
Ok. Over the weekend I actually went to a place where I could attempt a panorama. I know I'm no Vincent but how did I do? the first one is from an overlook about 1900 ft above the river. The day was complete crap, overcast and cloudy (as you can see in the pic) but I tried to make the best of it. The second one is the looking out over the campground where I was staying. C&C?
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Camera-Specific Properties:Camera SoftwarePTGui Pro (www.ptgui.com)Image-Specific Properties:Horizontal Resolution1280 dpiVertical Resolution1280 dpiImage Created2008:07:28 13:27:16F-Numberf/8.0ISO Speed Rating100Lens Aperturef/8.0
>> Mav !zx2K/XTtpo
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Second one...
>> Mav !zx2K/XTtpo
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Oops... posted the un-resized one in the OP. Sorry.
>> Anonymous
are these more than one row?

They look a little long and dont have much interesting in the foreground.

I'd do some of like 3 rows with 6 or 7 per row, and put something interesting in the foreground
>> Mav !zx2K/XTtpo
The first one is one row in portrait 10 wide - handheld btw. There was a 50ft drop right in front of me when I was taking the pic. Not really much I could do there unless I wanted to get a picture of the wall that kept us from falling off. The second is 9 wide by 2 high on a tripod. I was just practicing the technique and getting the lighting to be uniform. Unfortunately there really wasn't anything decent to put in the foreground as far as a subject goes.
>> Anonymous
boring slivers of photos..#2 is the only one with appropriate proportions
>> Anonymous
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Might as well post in here instead of making my own thread.

My first attempt at a pano, C&C appreciated

Camera-Specific Properties:Camera SoftwareAdobe Photoshop CS3 WindowsImage-Specific Properties:Image OrientationTop, Left-HandHorizontal Resolution300 dpiVertical Resolution300 dpiImage Created2008:07:28 14:01:19Color Space InformationUncalibratedImage Width1200Image Height318
>> Falldog !2qYdimqiHs
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>>227518
I can usually make it by without using a tripod. Just use the horizon or any other constant line as a reference point. (Which you did well)

The first one is more interesting, I'd like to see that on a nice day.

< One of my recent ones
>> Mav !zx2K/XTtpo
>>227533
Thanks. I had to tweak it a tiny bit in PTGui but not much. I remember that much from Vincent's instructions. You are right. I would have LOVED to have been able to get that shot on a clear day but I was only in that area for 2 days and both of them sucked. That overlook was about an hour from my campground in central PA.
>> Anonymous
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ps why did it lose contrast and saturation when I saved? Photoshops color profile is sRGB.

top is the photo posted, bottom is a print screen from photoshop.

Camera-Specific Properties:Camera SoftwareAdobe Photoshop CS3 WindowsImage-Specific Properties:Image OrientationTop, Left-HandHorizontal Resolution72 dpiVertical Resolution72 dpiImage Created2008:07:28 15:41:45Color Space InformationsRGBImage Width1198Image Height633
>> Falldog !2qYdimqiHs
>>227534
Which direction does it face? Sunset/sunrise on a day with light clouds would be cool.

& Where at in PA? (I'm from there myself)
>> Mav !zx2K/XTtpo
>>227537
I think it was facing north/east because the sun was behind me at about 2:30-3:00 pm(if you could see through the clouds). That was just outside of Renovo, PA near Cross Fork. I was there working an enduro race with my brother.
>> Mav !zx2K/XTtpo
>>227536
What did you use to stitch them together? I used PTGui Pro then edited the final pano in Lightroom. I'm not sure if that's the best way to do it but it worked for me...