My experiments with 45mm were promising indeed when extreme details are required. It's doable, but to my knowledge only Autopilot app will allow to program precise shooting grid for 45mm partial pano. Splitting the mission into 2 flights rarely delivers reliably stitching sequence. 200 images to make, not enough hovering time for such. Full 360 spherical pano will require approx. I'm not sure if spherical projection - as designed for interactive virtual tours - will be the best for your landscape photography.Īs for lenses, only 45mm Oly need some balancing rings, but this lens is overkill IMHO. However, Autopano is offering many different projection simulations, i.e. Naturally stitching software does some magic stretching and aligning all supplied images seamlessly, but this is only believable illusion after all. TIFF file size limitation is requiring the use of Large File Format instead when rendering final stitch in Autopano Giga, which you can later post-process in Photoshop and convert to any printable format to your liking.Īs for keystoneing or any other deformation. JPG's you see were made after cropping huge PSD files of final stitches. It will accept DNG sequence for stitching, but this is not best strategy since you want to pre-process certain rows with different settings before and input TIFF's for stitching. Anyway, stitching software is delivering finished image in either JPEG, TIFF or PSD format, not DNG. Ĭlick to expand.I'm not sure if Dropbox will accept this size file, will try tonight. But any serious landscape photographer must consider such. The computing stress is no small either when processing huge files. There's few little known tricks to make successful stitch and properly render hi-res panorama in Autopano Giga software, which is not cheap BTW. Final stitch in TIFF or any large file format I may finally colour grade in Photoshop. I process DNG in 3 batches with different exposure adjustment for each batch, Autopano Giga usually does excellent job matching and stitching them. This approach render enough material to choose from when opting for partial panoramic image. P4P will make only 38 images in spherical pano mode due to wider FOV. I'm ignoring zenith shots as irrelevant, unless sky features are capturing worthy. With 25mm lens that translates to approx. Click to expand.I'm usually shooting spherical pano 360 x 110, starting first row at 20 deg above horizon.
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