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I saw a nice panoramic image online. How do I go about creating my own (say, of my yard at home)?

mattdm
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robasta
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  • Some questions up front, what operating system do you use? What type of camera are you using? Are you just interested in the printing aspect of it, the photo taking requirements, the software aspect, or all of it? I don't understand what you mean by "for my house yard", can you explain that? – dpollitt May 26 '11 at 14:22
  • To simply answer your question you can easily take any image with any digital camera and simply by cropping the image to make it either wider or taller depending on the type of panorama you would like - you will achieve a look of a panorama. It will help to have as wide of an angle as possible to get a true panorama, so you can use computer software or in-camera software to join multiple images as well. – dpollitt May 26 '11 at 14:24
  • @mattdm - Not a duplicate since that question already assumes that stitching software must be used and says nothing about the process of getting the shots that such a software needs. – Itai May 26 '11 at 15:13
  • Before posting I didnt have a single clue. But the idea is that I need to send a panorama of my front yard to a friend overseas. – robasta May 26 '11 at 15:18

8 Answers8

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Apart from the the answers suggested by others, I recommend a few other tips. Based on what I read.

  1. Shoot the pics in Vertical mode. You might have to take more shots, but you'll realize at the end that the edge distortion is less when you click in Vertical mode. When you shoot in horizontal mode, you end up getting the edges cut when the final output is obtained. It's more like a thin horizontal strip. In vertical mode, this can be avoided to a great extent.
  2. DO NOT shoot in Auto Mode, as all the parameters would change after 1 or 2 shots. Instead press the shutter half-way in Auto mode, note down the values of f, shutter speed etc, switch to manual mode and then key-in these values and try them out.
  3. DO NOT set the White Balance to Auto, instead set it to Cloudy or anything else as the case maybe.
  4. Once you take the first segment, turn off the Auto Focus of your lens, you don't want your camera to focus different points in different segments.
  5. Have your finger in left / right corner to mark the first photo of the Panoramic series & like-wise right / left corner for the last photo of the series.
  6. Overlap about 20-25% of the last shot and make sure that 1/4th of the last shot appears in the current one.
  7. Shoot really quick. You don't want the clouds or any of the other background details to change too much.
  8. Use a remote or a timer of 2,5 secs to make sure that you don't shake the camera when you click the shutter. Whatever vibration you might have caused while clicking might have got subdued at the end of 5 secs for sure. (Hopefully)
  9. Once all of it is done, go for any of the popular panoramic photo-stitching software.

Last but not the least, go for a very good tripod. It's not possible without a tripod.

Hope this helps... Happy Shooting :-)

Imre
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  • A tripod is really helpful in lining up the shots and avoiding need to trim top/bottom of the panorama.
  • – SF. Dec 20 '12 at 15:00