Passerelle de Maison-Alfort/Saint-Maurice
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48°48' 59" N, 2°25' 28" E48.816343 2.424344
Comments
Nice one !
I have experienced the same "joy"
at having to use "only" about 35
pictures to do an equirectangular panorama...
but there are tricks ! :) For instance here I shot it with a pretty horrible white sky
that turned out to be completely burnt...
however you can see a nice blue sky...
doesn't it remind you of something ? maybe this ?
As far as I know India and Ireland share
the same sky, don't they ? :D
--
Seen on your photo stream. (? )
Posted 21 months ago.
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A fake sky? How come I never thought about this?
Thanks for sharing the trick. I should really
try it at some point. (Maybe not on a
8000x4000 picture, my computer was on its
knees while I was trying to fix the most
flagrant stitch errors.)
Posted 21 months ago.
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This photo has a fake sky:
Also, the original was 10,000 x 5,000 but
like you say, flickr dosn't like lage photos.
I usually post at 6,000 x 3,000.
Keep up the good work. Your photos are
looking great.
Posted 21 months ago.
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Hummm. My computer at 6000x3000 is already on
its knees (I only have 512 MB). A trick I've
just recently learned is to use multilayered
tiff as hugin output, edit in Gimp (layer
correction is very easy, and each layer is
cropped so it is really smaller than several
tiff files), save as xcf for backup, and use
a script to save each layer as a different
file (I use this one ).
See www.panotools.info/mediawiki/index.php?title=
Multi-Layer_... for more details.
Posted 21 months ago.
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@hangglide : Nice work, thanks for sharing!
@Seb : Some months ago I wondered if there was an
easy way in Gimp to export multi-layered TIFF
for enblend to process them, so thanks for
the link. However now I've found that
- if I'm doing a large panorama with lots
of pictures, the resulting picture size is
large enough so I cannot load more than two
or three layers at once. A 50-layer TIFF is
not an option: I have to work with
individuals TIFFs.
- if I'm doing a small panarama (say 6-8
shots), I usually works with a multi-layer
TIFF, but I don't need to export it: it's
faster and cleaner to blend it by hand, all
it takes is a large soft brush in erase mode.
Posted 21 months ago.
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le travail c`est magnifique
Posted 16 months ago.
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