The major maker of those one-shot-360+ cameras is Roundshot. They offer a 35mm
and a 120/220 version. Very expensive. I think the upper-end models will
rotate as long as the film holds out, for 2, 3, or 4 x 360 degrees!
There was also one called the Globoscope, if I remember my names right. It had
a very modern design
Unless you're subject is moving, it's much, much more cost effective to do
multiple images and stitch them together.
Skip
----- Original Message ---------------
Subject: [OM] Re: Paris panOraMa
From: Jim Brokaw <jbrokaw@xxxxxxxx>
Date: Wed, 09 Jun 2004 19:40:15 -0700
To: <olympus@xxxxxxxxxx>
>Some of the Epson photo inkjet printers can use 'banner' paper, which I
>think can be 13" x 44" or some-such... that should be big enough, right? I
>saw a bunch of pano prints at MacWorld Expo, and there were some really
>amazing images. Most were taken with specialized panoramic cameras, like
>those that rotate themselves around 360-degrees, but the prints were large,
>some probably 1.5 x 6 feet.
>--
>
>Jim Brokaw
>OM-'s of all sorts, and no OM-oney...
>
>
>
>
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