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I was reading about this technique over in the Technique group on Flickr. Basically, in 3 steps you can take a panorama and turn it into a little planet
The thread on Flickr has much better examples than I was able to come up with. Anyways...1. Take a panorama picture (or crop a normal picture so it's more like a panorama) 2. In your photo editing program of choice change the image size so that the height is equal to the width (in Photoshop Image -> Resize Image -> Deselect the checkbox for maintaining the proportions -> type the same number for height that is there for width) 3. Rotate the picture by 180 degrees. 4. Use the Distort -> Polar Coordinates filter and just use the default settings. You might have to clone some stuff to make the edges meet up so they don't look strange. This was about the best I could do based on the landscape of Wellington, but I still thought it was a fun little photoshop project ![]() ![]()
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Nikon D90 | Sony NEX-3 Nikkor 18-55 | Nikkor 70-300 | Nikkor 50 f/1.4D | Lensbaby 2.0 | Nikkor 85 f/1.8D | Nikkor 105 f/2.8 VR | Sigma 10-20 f/4-5.6 | Nikkor 10.5 f/2.8 Fisheye | Sony 16 f/2.8 | Sony 18-55 | 2xSB600 | Orbis Ring Flash Adapter My Flickr |
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Nikon D90 | Sony NEX-3 Nikkor 18-55 | Nikkor 70-300 | Nikkor 50 f/1.4D | Lensbaby 2.0 | Nikkor 85 f/1.8D | Nikkor 105 f/2.8 VR | Sigma 10-20 f/4-5.6 | Nikkor 10.5 f/2.8 Fisheye | Sony 16 f/2.8 | Sony 18-55 | 2xSB600 | Orbis Ring Flash Adapter My Flickr |
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To avoid the seaming problem, you could start with a 360-degree pano stitched together from several photos. But it's even more fun if you start with an equirectangular projection of a spherical pano and do a stereographic projection, especially since it's now built into Hugin.
![]() Original equirectangular: ![]() With stereographic mapping, becomes: ![]() If you want to see a master of remapping, take a look on Flickr at Seb Przd's photostream. Last edited by inkista; 04-20-2007 at 08:21 PM. Reason: added link to Seb Przd's flickr page; fixed photo url |
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Wow, great example inkista, and Seb Przd has some fantastic shots! Thanks for pointing those out. Needless to say, yours turned out much better than mine
![]() (And yes, had I actually had a decent picture for it, I know I would've avoided the seaming problem )
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Nikon D90 | Sony NEX-3 Nikkor 18-55 | Nikkor 70-300 | Nikkor 50 f/1.4D | Lensbaby 2.0 | Nikkor 85 f/1.8D | Nikkor 105 f/2.8 VR | Sigma 10-20 f/4-5.6 | Nikkor 10.5 f/2.8 Fisheye | Sony 16 f/2.8 | Sony 18-55 | 2xSB600 | Orbis Ring Flash Adapter My Flickr |
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Hey, it still looks cool. Very Little Prince-y.
![]() I love pano stitching, which inevitably led me to the whole spherical thing. But it's definitely not for everybody. Seb Przd's amazing--his images all started out as hand-held point-and-shoot photos that he stitched together with open-source software (Hugin). There's no way I would have gotten into it, if I'd started that way. My favorite cubic/spherical/qtvr panorama links are: |
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I'm overwhelmed with so much beautiful little planets posted on the net, the tutorial seemed easy that I just had to try it. BUT I had nothing near to a panorama shot to start with
! So I played around with a quick snapshot of my son's sixth grade class after a mangrove tree planting trip, and a landscape he took then. I am soooo new at photo editing but I just had to do the fun stuff, I promise myself I'll learn the basics later . Considering the input, I'm pretty happy with my output . I hope the class appreciates it, my son does! ![]() EDIT: where did that purple frame come from? how do i get rid of it?
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mom with an old canon point-and-shoot appreciate comments/ critique ok to edit and re-post on DPS
Last edited by tekla; 07-26-2007 at 12:52 AM. |
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A bit of fun with a panorama of the Vltava River and the Charles Bridge in Prague.
![]() I was intrigued when I saw this technique and thought I'd give it a try. The first couple I tried had very prominent seams where the edges of the original panorama joined. Being lazy and not wanting to do heavy duty cloning to clean it up, I decided to try this to take care of the messy seams. First I make a duplicate of the original panorama, rotated it horizontally and saved. Next I stitched the two together using automate and photo merge making a double panorama. Then following Nicole's excellent instructions, I created this fantasy. Prague, Czech Republic July 2007 Last edited by katherine; 08-01-2007 at 04:22 AM. |
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Looks great katherine, and what an excellent way to get rid of the annoying seams
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Nikon D90 | Sony NEX-3 Nikkor 18-55 | Nikkor 70-300 | Nikkor 50 f/1.4D | Lensbaby 2.0 | Nikkor 85 f/1.8D | Nikkor 105 f/2.8 VR | Sigma 10-20 f/4-5.6 | Nikkor 10.5 f/2.8 Fisheye | Sony 16 f/2.8 | Sony 18-55 | 2xSB600 | Orbis Ring Flash Adapter My Flickr |
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