Thanks all for greetings! Time for throwing time, and time for lift time...
2 Phill D - Its wery simply. Steps (in Photoshop):
1. Take and create 360 deg panorama
2. Resampe image to square size - can also close to it
3. Turn image head over heels
4. Filter - Distort - Polar Coordinates...
5. A few to draw in the image centre and corners.
Its All
Last edited by Kushnirenko; 09-15-2008 at 11:02 PM.
Finall stitched a few of my US holiday shots together. The first 2 are taken through the rather dirty glass from the top of the Washington monument and the last one is the view from the Top of the Rock in New York taken by pokeing my camera through the gap between the glass panels.
Around every picture there's a corner & round every corner there's a picture
- the fun's in finding them
Well, it might not technically be a panorama, but I stitched a few shots
together to form a common horizon line for my introduction to photography
class, as my final "portfolio" for the semester. They geographically span
around 350 miles and a little over a year. All of them were taken with my Oly
E-410, except, ironically, the centerpiece of the whole thing, the ram looking
over the landscape. That one was with a Canon A610. And you thought
140mm and 5 megapixels wasn't enough for cropped printed wildlife!
The second one was also part of it, just below the first one on the wall.
The shots don't line up quite as nicely, but individually they are slightly better.
Plus, they provided a whole lot of atmosphere to the one above when seen
together in real life. Really, these look substantially better printed and
occupying several feet (about 6) of wall space than they do here.