Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/09/08
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi John, Thanks ol' buddy. Just let me say one thing other than praise for great images...... it's all yours my friend! :-) Given your description of what's entailed to produce one image I know I do not have the patients to create what you've done, well OK, you and your computer. ;-) They sure look interesting and very effective. The one that empressed me the most was the Toronto skyline, as it was so completely different from anything else I can ever remember. ted Ted Grant Photography Limited www.islandnet.com/~tedgrant - ----- Original Message ----- From: "Johnny Deadman" <john@pinkheadedbug.com> To: "LUG" <leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us> Sent: Saturday, September 08, 2001 4:17 PM Subject: Re: [Leica] 360 degrees of Midway fun at > on 9/8/01 6:53 PM, Ted Grant at tedgrant@home.com wrote: > > >>>>> the Canadian National Exhibition. > >> > >> http://www.pinkheadedbug.com/360/623-pan-3-crop-flat.jpg <<< > > > What I'm surprised at is, the quality and consistency of the exposures as > > you matched them to look as though the finished photograph was taken with a > > Panon or some type of panoramic moving camera. > > > > How long does it take to assemble the exposures to the final product? > > the first thing is to shoot the images at the exact same exposure and do it > quickly before the light changes. You can get away with exactly ONE ugly > discontinuity, but it has to be where the pan breaks. You can cover up an > error this way but at the expense of choosing the center point of the final > image. > > you pretty much have to use color neg because the exposure variation between > a shot into the sun and a shot with the sun at your back is extreme, and you > can't stop down/up to compensate > > the second thing is to scan them identically with a fixed exposure etc. > Vuescan is the easy way to do this, otherwise you scan 'em raw and do > exactly the same manipulations to each image > > then the hard work begins! > > about 30 mins to set up the control points between the images so the > software knows how to match them up > > about 30 mins to optimize yaw, pitch, roll etc to compensate for camera > movement between exposures. This is where you find out how well you shot it. > > about 90 mins processing time for the software to churn away and remap them > to a cylindrical presentation (I do this on a second computer) > > about 10 mins for an action in Photoshop to build the remapped images into a > massive layered file and apply the first (very bad) automated stitches using > layer masks. > > about another 60 mins to do the proper stitches manually, color correct, and > produce the final image > > but it's fun so it doesn't seem like hard work > > (the hardest thing is choosing the spot to take the pan from... if you don't > get THAT right everything else is a waste of time. It's really hard.... > trying to find some magic place... there is a greek word for it I think... > 'omphalos'... the place of power) > > sometimes the lens vignetting causes dark bands... to correct these you take > the final image into LAB color mode and dodge the lightness channel > -- > John Brownlow > > http://www.pinkheadedbug.com > >