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A six shot pano. Done in Photoshop CS3 with the improved Photomerge. It really is improved, and I have less need to use my Panotools now. Merged as two panos of three shots each, after cloning out a power pylon.
A six shot pano. Done in Photoshop CS3 with the improved Photomerge. It really is improved, and I have less need to use my Panotools now. Merged as two panos of three shots each, after cloning out a power pylon.
Roger
It's pano day today - a very fine stitch-up, if I may say so
You have everything in there - detail, colour, perspective - it's a feast for the eyes!
I have used CS3 PhotoMerge as well - it's definitely improved, but I did detect some minor misalignment in my effort. This was with 6 portrait mode frames in a line.
I'll upload it later.
By the way, Roger, I need to pick your brains in the Computer conundrums board
Love the whole of the foreground which is very rich in colour but not sure about the sky. The far left portion seems slightly misbalanced with the rest.
JMO
It's pano day today - a very fine stitch-up, if I may say so
You have everything in there - detail, colour, perspective - it's a feast for the eyes!
I have used CS3 PhotoMerge as well - it's definitely improved, but I did detect some minor misalignment in my effort. This was with 6 portrait mode frames in a line.
I'll upload it later.
By the way, Roger, I need to pick your brains in the Computer conundrums board
Ian
As promised:
This is from 7 portrait mode frames. I really only threw this together for some family to look at. It's from JPEGs and the high contrast conditions proved a struggle for me to balance the cloud highlights and the shadows.
Hi Ian,
A great subject for a pano, "I really only threw this together for some family to look at" Do I see some very fine joins in the image? the look very like fine hair line cracks, especially in the grass areas and climbing up the small conifer and building just to the left of the marqee. I like the way the path diverges and takes your interest in different directions. An interesting and absorbing image. where was it taken?
Hi Ian,
A great subject for a pano, "I really only threw this together for some family to look at" Do I see some very fine joins in the image? the look very like fine hair line cracks, especially in the grass areas and climbing up the small conifer and building just to the left of the marqee. I like the way the path diverges and takes your interest in different directions. An interesting and absorbing image. where was it taken?
Yes, there are some artefacts - hence my original response in this thread. Photomerge is better in CS3 - certainly easier to use and less prone to 'gving up' but it's still not that great at the stitching, relative to some speciality packages.
The scene is the grounds of Abbot's Hill School, Kings Langley, the former home of paper mill baron John Dickinson (and quite by coincidence - the DPNow office is situated in one of the former Dickinson paper mill buildings in Apsley). It was built in the late 1830s.
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