> Dan Mitchell wrote:
> Neat to see the techniques you need to overcome slower burst rates,
> and the results you can get even so:
>
> http://www.luminous-landscape.com/essays/pano-adventures.shtml
I recently got an interesting result from the panning of an
action-sequence (racecar going off-track into *almost* kiss the wall -
not my photos, so I don't have it available), which, due to the
overlap, I ran through the autostitch software:
http://www.cs.ubc.ca/~mbrown/autostitch/autostitch.html
It came up with an interesting panoramic sequence of action.
It looked like a "train" of identical cars following each
other, crashing through the sandpit towards the wall. I haven't
tried making a sequence of my own photos, to see what it's like,
but I've been curious about trying while panning a softball
run-for-base, or a touch-footy dive for try line (two amateur
sports readily available to me). It might be a technique that
tires quickly, and uses a lot of frames to get right, but I think
the featured participants might like them.
Cheers,
Marc
Sydney, Oz
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