I would not think so either (the aperture used was f11, BTW). Exposure
was constant as well, except for one thing--I had left the camera on
auto ISO, so it could be that ISO was changed from 160 to 320 for some
of the images.
I suspect that it might have been this, plus the natural change in the
color of the sky as you rotate 360 degrees, that is responsible.
Cheers,
nathan
Nathan Wajsman
Alicante, Spain
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On Jun 25, 2009, at 2:45 PM, Chuck Norcutt wrote:
> I hadn't thought about that. It was taken with a 24mm lens but given
> that it was on a Leica with a 1.33X crop sensor and probably at f/8 or
> thereabouts I shouldn't think that vignetting should be in evidence.
>
> Chuck Norcutt
>
> Ralf Loi wrote:
>> <<
>> I see the dark bands in the sky which look like the image is not well
>> blended in those parts.
>>
>> I think that this problem is related (also) to vignetting of the
>> lens,
>> more visible on an uniform area like the sky.
>>
>> Ralf Loi
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