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China Great Wall at Jinshanling

China Great Wall at Jinshanling
Copyright ©2005, Alfred Molon
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China Great Wall at Jinshanling Double-row spherical panorama (180?) of 13 images (RAW). The resulting image is 57 MPixel.

Photographer: Alfred Molon
Folder: Alfred Molon
Uploaded: 03-Dec-2005 14:23 CET
Current Rating: 8.80/5
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Model release available:
Camera: Olympus C8080
Exposure time: 1/25
Aperture: F2.4
Focal length: 30mm
Lens:
Focusing method: iESP P-AF
ISO: 50
White balance:
Flash: no
Image format: RAW
Processing applied: RAW converted to JPEG, panorama assembled with PTGUI, crop
Various:
Image resized to: 318x900

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NO SUBJECT

Great work.

Udo Altmann at 17:58 CET on 03-Dec-2005 [Reply]

Kudos

My hat is off to you Alfred. A seamless, two row, thirteen frame stitch is serious. Can you see it projected on a spherical screen? Awesome! T'were mine, I couldn't sleep till the sky got a transplant. Although the distance mist would be a problem.

bert

Donald Bryant at 19:43 CET on 03-Dec-2005 [Reply]

NO SUBJECT

Donald Bryant wrote:
> My hat is off to you Alfred. A seamless, two row, thirteen frame stitch is serious. Can
> you see it projected on a spherical screen? Awesome! T'were mine, I couldn't sleep till
> the sky got a transplant. Although the distance mist would be a problem.

Kudos go to the developer of PTGUI v5. The software generates such seamless panoramas with very little human intervention. It incorporates automatic colour adjusting and blending steps and generates the control points automatically.

Alfred Molon at 20:04 CET on 03-Dec-2005 [Reply]

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The software has done an excelent job of stitching the images together, I love the rich colours of the foreground and the composition is good, just a shame about the sky.
Cheers Steve

Steve Elliott at 21:17 CET on 03-Dec-2005 [Reply]

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Alfred Molon wrote:
> Donald Bryant wrote:
> > My hat is off to you Alfred. A seamless, two row, thirteen frame stitch is serious. Can
> > you see it projected on a spherical screen? Awesome! T'were mine, I couldn't sleep till
> > the sky got a transplant. Although the distance mist would be a problem.
>
> Kudos go to the developer of PTGUI v5. The software generates such seamless panoramas with
> very little human intervention. It incorporates automatic colour adjusting and blending steps
> and generates the control points automatically.
>
Thanks for the tip. I'll definitely check out PTGUI.

Donald Bryant at 21:37 CET on 03-Dec-2005 [Reply]

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Beautiful and very well done, Alfred....chheers Olga Gouveia

Olga Gouveia at 22:52 CET on 03-Dec-2005 [Reply]

The sky

Steve Elliott wrote:
> The software has done an excelent job of stitching the images together, I love the rich colours
> of the foreground and the composition is good, just a shame about the sky.

Yep, lighting conditions were inconvenient. I should have been there at a different time of the day, with the sun in a different position. Another problem was the haze in the sky, which limited visibility.

Alfred Molon at 22:58 CET on 03-Dec-2005 [Reply]

NO SUBJECT

Very well done congratulations on a great picture

Ann Smith at 23:17 CET on 07-Dec-2005 [Reply]

Fantastic

Not only is the pano excellent, the overall image really "takes you there" and gives some sense of the scale of the wall.

Greg Mennegar at 21:24 CEST on 02-May-2010 [Reply]