On 5/4/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I don't mean the stitching together part; I have  PS books that tell me how
> to do that. And I am good enough with PS (Elements  anyway) that I figure that
> part would not be a major problem.
>
> So how do  you guys do panoramas anyway? Up until now I have not been
> tempted, but the  other day I came across a scene that would have worked well.
>
> http://members.aol.com/eactivist/PAWS/pages/field2.htm
> http://members.aol.com/eactivist/PAWS/pages/field1.htm
>
> Tripod always,  right? Is a level needed?
>
> How do you make sure that you remain on the  same plane (get the horizon on
> the same plane)?
>
> If you were going to  shoot a 180 degree shot, how many pictures do you think
> it would take? How much  do you try to overlap?
>
> I am totally clueless on this one.
>

You should have been at GFM last year to hear Mark's lecture on the subject.

I was pretty much nodding off during most of it, as personally I have
no interest in panos, but I recall him saying that the "less work" you
make the programme do, the better results you're likely to get, and
faster, too.

I do recall him saying something about the nodal point of lenses (must
like Bill said).  One can get special panning heads for that purpose,
IIRC.

I forget (or rather, never heard) the rest of what Mark said, but he
showed lots of pretty pictures...

cheers,
frank
-- 
"Sharpness is a bourgeois concept."  -Henri Cartier-Bresson

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