Not normally, John. So when taking images to make up a panorama, it's best to
set the camera to manual and adjust the exposure to allow for the lighting
conditions, choosing the part you want to be best exposed if there are wide
variations in light.
I can't imagine how the shadows might change as the shots should be taken in
quick succession.
In Chuck's example with the large bird: if a moving bird were "frozen" in the
panorama, it's likely that there was some compression of other parts of the
scene.
Chris
On 24 Apr 2012, at 00:41, John Hudson wrote:
> When stitching together adjacent images to make one large panoramic image
> does the software compensate for changes in the lighting conditions and
> shadow patterns seen in each separate image ?
>
> jh
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