This is a discussion on Panoramic Photo's within the Show your photo (Color) - Landscape & Nature (flowers, mountains, storms etc.) forums, part of the Photography & Fine art photography category; Nice I take quite a few pano's (and have some more still to put together from a trip to New ...
I have never done a pano but I am going to try this week I think. How do I to it? I have heard that you cannot hand shoot it and that I need a special head for my tripod. I shoot people but I think it would be awesome to make a pano portrait or try and play with that kind of a shot.
There's a heap of info here - http://www.panoguide.com/howto/
I'll still give my basic tips anyway (someone please correct me if anything is wrong!).
- Use a tripod (makes rotating around a single point easier). I don't have a special panorama head, it's just a ball head.
- Only use a UV filter. If you use a circ. polarizer (or grad nd filter) you'll have a painful time trying to stitch it.
- Once you've worked out an exposure (you'll need to focus on one area to get a reading, but make sure it's ok for the rest of the scene), switch your camera to manual and set your exposure/shutter speed. Means it won't change throughout the whole set
- Use manual focus (same reason as above).
- Make sure you overlap your shots. Stitching software looks for common points between images when it puts it all together, overlapping your shots will make this work better.
- Shooting vertical is better. This is mainly so after it's all put together you can crop things the way you want. (also means more shots = bigger end result).
I sometimes bracket my shots to give me a little latitude but depends on the situation.
I think that's it![]()
These are great! I can't wait to try one too! Great tips!
Yeah, these are great. Its good to see what else you guys have done. These are great things to try when you have the opportunity. dmagick sounds looks and sounds like he has it down. Those are some great tips. Nice job.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/28054853@N08/
Photography is more than just taking a picture and freezing the action, or leaving the shutter open. It is more than orchestrating the image with the stroke of a brush. Its the realization and explanation that reality is an isolated experience in which only a specific individual can comprehend during any given time period. - Your Truly!
Here's one of Abu Dhabi when I was in the United Arab Emirates. (And done without tripod)
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