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The Plum Blossom Festival
 
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Image Title:  The Plum Blossom Festival
  0
Favorites: 0 
 By: Roger Williams  
  Copyright ©2006

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Photographer Roger Williams  Roger Williams {Karma:86139}
Project N/A Camera Model Voigtlander Bessaflex
Categories Journalism
Nature
People
Film Format
Portfolio Spherical Panoramas
Japanalia
Trees
Lens Peleng 8/3.5 Circular Fisheye
Uploaded 3/15/2006 Film / Memory Type Digital
    ISO / Film Speed
Views 534 Shutter 1/500
Favorites Aperture f/11
Critiques 9 Rating
Pending
/ 1 Ratings
Location City -  Mogusaen
State -  TOKYO, HINO CITY
Country - Japan   Japan
About Another panorama from our famous local hillside park. It was pretty full of people, and the sun was out, which makes panoramas a bit difficult. I persevered with this one, which even looks reasonably good as a static screen display. But you should see it in Virtual Reality mode!
Random Pictures By:
Roger
Williams


Sumo I

Koganei Park

Backlit Park

Red Feather Girls

A New Kind of Panorama

Tending the Flowers II

Inogashira Park

Blue Umbrella Stall

Anyone for Shoplifting?

Two Buddhas

There are 9 Comments in 1 Pages
  1
Susie OConnor Susie OConnor   {K:34798} 3/16/2006
Thanks again Roger. I will check it out. I'm a Windows type of gal so that should work well for me. )

  0


Roger Williams Roger Williams   {K:86139} 3/16/2006
Susie, simple panos with two or three pics are a GOOD place to start. You can try PTgui free. Visit www.ptgui.com. The Dutchman (Joost) who made this is very helpful and always answers his E-mail very quickly. See what it does with your photos. I think you will be pleased. The forum isn't really up and going yet, just me trying to generate interest. [g] Oh yes, if you are a MAC user I will have to recommend something else. PTgui is Windows only.

  0


Susie OConnor Susie OConnor   {K:34798} 3/16/2006
Thanks Roger. I'm having problems with just making a simple pano with 2 or 3 pics. They don't seem to stitch together very well. Is this program called PTgui? I will check out the forum.
Susie

  0


Roger Williams Roger Williams   {K:86139} 3/16/2006
You REALLY want to know, Susie? Best way is to get a nice wide-angle lens, and put your camera on a tripod that lets you swing it around the full circle while staying quite level. If you know the angle of the field-of-view, you can work out how many photos you will have to take, and so how to space your photos around the 360 degrees. The wider the angle, the fewer you need to take. With my fisheye I could get away with three but usually take four--at 90 degrees--to allow more overlap. Then you put the resulting pictures into a stitching program like PTgui (this is about 50 or 60 USD and really excellent). If you use the simple "wizard" you'll get a nice panorama, all beautifully stitched together, with no trouble at all. Doing it with fisheyes is a bit harder, but not much... Probably more than you wanted to know. [grin] The Usefilm panorama forum is the place for these and other tips.

  0


Susie OConnor Susie OConnor   {K:34798} 3/16/2006
Another great 360 Roger. How in the world....well done!
Susie

  0


Galal El Missary   {K:84569} 3/15/2006
Excellent panaroma view , great use of the fish eye , Best regards dear Roger .

Galal

  0


Roger Williams Roger Williams   {K:86139} 3/15/2006
Yes, Henrik, it is Japanese... the spring is almost here. Soon we will have the cherry blossom festival! I'm glad you like the panorama. This one was quite difficult!

  0


Henrik Hanselmann Henrik Hanselmann   {K:658} 3/15/2006
The colours are beautiful, must be japanese.

  0


Henrik Hanselmann Henrik Hanselmann   {K:658} 3/15/2006
Very nice! Panorama is difficult, but it's good and i think the distortion makes it even more interesting.

  0


  1

 

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