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Thread: Stitched Together

  1. #31
    2 Bit Hack
    Join Date
    Feb 2014
    Posts
    940

    Re: Stitched Together

    Taken in winter 82-83. June lake to the left in the valley. This is Horseshoe Canyon taken from US 395 south of Mono Lake.
    Mamiya 645 1000s 1.9/80. Pan-X 125. Two shots stitched in Elements.
    HorseshoeCanyon by jmarmck, on Flickr
    Regards

    Marty

  2. #32

    Join Date
    Dec 2011
    Posts
    75

    Re: Stitched Together

    Apologies if anyone posted this already, but while searching for stitching software, I saw that PanaVue is going out of business (?). Aside from the sadness of that, they are giving away their Enterprise Edition 3 for free:

    http://www.panavue.com/en/company/mission.htm

    I'd try it, but it's Windows only.

  3. #33

    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    SF Bay Area
    Posts
    308

    Re: Stitched Together

    Not doing anything from my 4x5 Provia film work but rather with an A6000 on a Gigapan Epic robotic head. Using Autopano Kolor to stitch and Photoshop CS6 to focus stack blend and process the Autopano outputs. Autopano much better than Photomerge in CS6. Have made some much larger stitches than the below. Each stitched panel is focus stack blended from multiple captures using sharp lenses set optimally at f8 to f11, then downsized a bit, so all frame areas are sharp.

    11,400x6000 pixels from a 3x2 frame set of A6000 6kx4k pixel panels.



    12,000x10,600 pixels from a 3x4 frame set.



    From a couple weeks ago, a 7800x5400 pixel image from a 2x2 frame set:


  4. #34

    Join Date
    Mar 2005
    Location
    Baton Rouge, LA
    Posts
    2,428

    Re: Stitched Together

    St Louis Cathedral, New Orleans, three sheets of 4x5:

    http://www.gigapan.com/gigapans/161414

    St. Mary's Assumption Church, New Orleans, a bunch of Nikon d600 frames:

    http://www.gigapan.com/gigapans/161406

  5. #35
    Gary Beasley's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Marietta Ga. East Cobb.
    Posts
    727

    Re: Stitched Together

    Here is a couple done at Yosemite, one of Bridal veil and one from a parking area outside the valley looking back at halfdome. Both were with an 8mp Canon Rebel. The Rodin statue group at Stanford University was taken with a Samsung S4 cellphone and stitched for a very wide shot of the grouping.
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails bridal.jpg   halfdome.jpg   rodin-sculptures-syanford.jpg  

  6. #36

    Join Date
    Mar 2010
    Location
    New York
    Posts
    708

    Re: Stitched Together

    Sierra Pano at Sunrise from Alabama Hills

    Hasselblad H4D-50, 150mm HC Lens

    Stitched from 8 full size medium format vertical images.
    Simple stitching - nothing exotic - using CS5
    Image measures 2'2" high by 12' long @ 300ppi







    I know just enough to be dangerous !

  7. #37

    Join Date
    Mar 2011
    Posts
    44

    Re: Stitched Together

    Three 4x5 negatives, scanned and stitched....

    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	Spokane Br tryptic pano master.jpg 
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  8. #38

    Join Date
    Dec 2000
    Location
    Tonopah, Nevada, USA
    Posts
    6,334

    Re: Stitched Together

    I guess using a Kodak Cirkut camera is just cheating, huh?

  9. #39
    2 Bit Hack
    Join Date
    Feb 2014
    Posts
    940

    Re: Stitched Together

    Quote Originally Posted by Jim Galli View Post
    I guess using a Kodak Cirkut camera is just cheating, huh?
    or a Noblex
    Regards

    Marty

  10. #40

    Join Date
    Jul 1998
    Location
    Lund, Sweden
    Posts
    2,214

    Re: Stitched Together



    Sutherland, Coigach and Torridan, 2005.

    Six 4x5 sheets, landscape orientation, stitched in PS5.

    More of a proof of concept than a regular way of working: I'm bad at 'seeing' wide angle, and I wanted to see how the shapes of the mountains, lochs and coastlines would combine in a 180° panorama. Planned to go back and re-do when the colours and clouds were more to my taste, but never did.

    Set up the tripod like a mortar emplacement, with all the angles and adjustments set in advance. Taking the shots was done by setting angles on the pan head, working as fast as possible before the light changed too much. A minute or so per exposure.


    PS: I thought I was spotting dust. Turned out I was spotting sheep.

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