Did that take a lot of time to piece together or was it more of the program doing it for you?
Thanks!
...This was a labor of luv. I had two failed attempts using a 16mm focal length. The 50mm worked much better but the more shots you have, the longer the software takes to process the shot.
A lot of time was spent finding the right output resolution size, proportions, pano projection, and crop. Once that is set, the program does the rest. It took the software about 6 hrs to process the final pano.
I probably invested about 20-30 hrs trying to get this right. Most of it was trial and error learning the new pano software and some can be attributed to the time on site taking the shots - 3x.
In the past I used CS3 but it couldn't handle this huge FOV.
...the building's primary function today is as a museum. It was originally built to be a train station...
Given the current state of security paranoia, did you have to deal with the security people there? Does PTGui accept more memory allocation beyond 256MB in order to speed up the processing? This stitched pano stuff is addictive for sure. My name is Cuong and I'm a stitched pano addict (SPA).:D
Cuong
"She Was a Little Taste of Heaven – And a One-Way Ticket to Hell!" - Max Phillips
Given the current state of security paranoia, did you have to deal with the security people there? Does PTGui accept more memory allocation beyond 256MB in order to speed up the processing? This stitched pano stuff is addictive for sure. My name is Cuong and I'm a stitched pano addict (SPA).:D
Cuong
Security was not a problem at all, they even allowed me to move some plastic carts out of the shot as long as I put them back. The museum allows photography as long as it's not for profit.
Re: PTGui Ram, I've only had the program about a week so I'm still learning the ins and outs. I haven't seen anything to control the RAM allocation.
PTGui is capable of stitching multiple exposures as well to generate an HDR result. I haven't attempted that yet...
Comments
Jeff Meyers
http://danielplumer.com/
Facebook Fan Page
Thanks everyone!
PTGui can stitch any number of photos and only uses about 256mb of RAM to do it.
It took (50) shots to cover the Field of View I wanted, (5) rows of (10) shots each.
I tried it with a 16mm lens (14 shots - 2 rows of 7) but the distortion was to great to overcome. The result had to many mismatched elements.
Here's an example of the FOV from a single shot of the 50mm lens uncropped:
I'm not seeing the single shot. But the original post is stunning.
Jack
(My real name is John but Jack'll do)
GreyLeaf PhotoGraphy
Did that take a lot of time to piece together or was it more of the program doing it for you?
http://danielplumer.com/
Facebook Fan Page
Thanks!
...This was a labor of luv. I had two failed attempts using a 16mm focal length. The 50mm worked much better but the more shots you have, the longer the software takes to process the shot.
A lot of time was spent finding the right output resolution size, proportions, pano projection, and crop. Once that is set, the program does the rest. It took the software about 6 hrs to process the final pano.
I probably invested about 20-30 hrs trying to get this right. Most of it was trial and error learning the new pano software and some can be attributed to the time on site taking the shots - 3x.
In the past I used CS3 but it couldn't handle this huge FOV.
I hope the next one will be much quicker...
Thanks!
...the building's primary function today is as a museum. It was originally built to be a train station.
Amtrack still runs a train through here every night at about 3am.
The museum closes at 5pm and Amtrack reopens at 11pm and stays open till 6:30am every night.
So I show up about 11:30pm after the cleaning crew has done it's job!
Its like candy for the eyes.
Cuong
Security was not a problem at all, they even allowed me to move some plastic carts out of the shot as long as I put them back. The museum allows photography as long as it's not for profit.
Re: PTGui Ram, I've only had the program about a week so I'm still learning the ins and outs. I haven't seen anything to control the RAM allocation.
PTGui is capable of stitching multiple exposures as well to generate an HDR result. I haven't attempted that yet...