TexasBadger said:Moab Utah. Canon 5D. 5 stitched images with PS6.
serendipidy said:Sporgon said:Northstar said:Nicely done Sporgon...sometimes the horizon can be tricky can't it?
Thanks Northstar. Yes it can, in fact I have an alarming inability to hold the camera level. I think it's probably because I tend to look through the camera with my head tilted to one side. I normally have to rotate my images anti clockwise, and it's surprising just how much image area you loose if you have to rotate even 1 degree.
+1
I almost never have a level horizon. Usually always off about 1 degree (usually must rotate counterclockwise to correct). I have pondered this and some thoughts:
1) my head or eyes or brain is tilted
2) I rotate the camera slightly when I press the shutter
3) maybe the sensor is rotated slightly in relation to the viewfinder
4) you just can't consistently be perfect
It is probably because it is backlit. Look at the shadows of the bushes on the right. Does it need WB correction?Northstar said:TexasBadger said:Moab Utah. Canon 5D. 5 stitched images with PS6.
I'm curious...why does the right side of the image look darker than the left?
I haven't done any stitching photography, so I'm just guessing that the light changed while shooting? (I see clouds)
Havs said:Here's a shot from 9/18/13, taken at Wind Point beach in Racine WI, looking south. No manipulation other than lens correction applied in camera Raw CS6. Shot was on 6D, 17-40L at 30sec f16 Av on a Manfrotto 3021B. 1st night with the 17-40 lens, the water in Lake Michigan was warm enough to wade in. Light lasted about 10 minutes!
+1cayenne said:
cid said:+1cayenne said: