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Anonymous
The more photos you use in a panorama, the better it comes out. You want something like, 60-70% overlap for every photo. The cartographers who make the giant aerial maps will use 90-95% overlap, just to make their jobs easier.
And no tripod? No problem, cuz this next tip works better than one anyway. Unless you have a special panorama head, you're going to get parallax. I'm willing to bet, however, that you do have an office chair or barstool or a lazy suzan (those rotating wheels you put on your table). Stick your camera on one of those, move it so the lens (not the camera body) is positioned over the axis of rotation and snap away. Stick something under the camera so you don't get any of the chair in the bottom of your photo, if you feel so inclined.
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