At 11:20 PM Thursday 21/06/2001, you wrote:
On Wed, 20 Jun 2001 14:45:20 +0100, Steve wrote:
>i honestly don't think that it can be done. The problem is, is that although
>you may mount the camera on a panning tripod, use the same exposure etc, the
>light entering the camera will be at a different angle each time you pan and
>will show up mostly in the exposure of the sky.
>
What struck me as difficult and the reason for my initial post was that I
think the *Panning* approach will give distortions in the final stitched
result. The frames at the ends will be further away from the camera than
the centre ones but maybe this is not noticeable; the truth is I haven't tried.
The technique I was thinking of was finding a position across from a
panorama you wished to take and then shooting a frame. Moving sideways by a
calculated amount according to field of view of the lens. Taking another
frame. And repeating this till the desired number of frames was taken. The
logic is that all the frames of the landscape would be perpendicular to the
film and be easier to match from frame to frame. Maybe its not necessary?
This assumes that you have several positions from which you can take the
pictures and they would need to be equidistant from the subject. Maybe too
much trouble for what its worth? Maybe practically impossible?
I think I'll try the panning approach as it seems the easier technique. Any
advice on the other method I have thought of would be appreciated including
any practical techniques anyone may have.
Thanks
Oben
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