Post your Panoramics!

@Marsu42: I've always used 1/3 overlap (both for landscape and portrait stitches, and it's always worked fine for me. Why 1/3? Because the "Rule of 3rds" overlay on the LCD makes it easy! :P

@Tinky: Ick...Midges. The only thing I really disliked about camping on the Isle of Skye...
 
Upvote 0
I do single frames and digital stitches, but prefer shooting 617 film on my Fuji GX617.

These are film, I put some stitches up later.
 

Attachments

  • 11149197_1120526704640936_4776018116525196372_o.jpg
    11149197_1120526704640936_4776018116525196372_o.jpg
    435.7 KB · Views: 400
  • 10355504_882103891816553_9162447679984111964_o.jpg
    10355504_882103891816553_9162447679984111964_o.jpg
    80.2 KB · Views: 390
  • 1891497_982653228428285_6471971809055703719_o.jpg
    1891497_982653228428285_6471971809055703719_o.jpg
    158.9 KB · Views: 321
  • 10366086_880793391947603_1453494579318039134_n.jpg
    10366086_880793391947603_1453494579318039134_n.jpg
    84.4 KB · Views: 402
Upvote 0
Rocky said:
LOALTD said:
I'm no pano master, but I occasionally dabble in some stitching.


This is a crop from a 13-shot (vertical) stitch of Denali and the Alaska range. All shots were at 200mm, f/11. I stitched them with auto-pano giga.


Great place to shoot, stupid easy. Just pull into the parking lot and walk 5 minutes!

Besides high resolution, is there any other reason why 200mm lens is used. You can get the same view with a 21mm lens. Thanks


Good question! Resolution is definitely a part of it, but, generally, I find telephotos to have much better optical quality that wide-angles. I took a very similar photo with a 24mm and had a bunch of distracting foreground and too much sky. When I cropped them off, I was left with an image that wasn't anywhere near as crisp as this one.


I also felt that a pano would do the tallest mountain in North America a bit more justice :)
 
Upvote 0
Sometimes I use stitching to get a wider angle view than the lens I have with me..... The following picture is 4 images with a 17mm lens stitched together for an ultrawide view....
 

Attachments

  • Pano10.jpg
    Pano10.jpg
    876 KB · Views: 254
Upvote 0
Sporgon said:
A five shot panoramic shot on the 6D + 40 mil pancake, ISO 100, f11, @1/15. Take in the Fairy Glen near Betws-y-Coed ( means prayer house in the forest originally), Snowdonia, England. I've been trying to get a picture of this when the light is right and it looks magical, for years.

All one exposure with the exception of the extreme highlights in the water which is two stops less.

That is a fantastic shot.....
 
Upvote 0