RickDB 10 Posted May 7, 2008 Dedicated to Dennis Aubrey - hope you enjoy this fine example of the perpendicular style as I have enjoyed your Romanesque photos. BTW this is a two shot HDR panorama with the 24mm TSE lens for a wide view of the aisle - works pretty well. Link to comment
aginbyte 0 Posted May 7, 2008 ... lovely shot, Rick, and thank you. In the larger view it is great to see the detail in the left aisle, particularly the window, which probably made all the HDR work worth it, right? Rick, did you have any problem with vignetting at the center seam? I can't see any, but in some of my earlier tests did experience some in this kind of vertical stiched shot. This is such a nice piece of work, thanks again! Link to comment
RickDB 10 Posted May 7, 2008 ...Dennis, thought you might like this one, glad you agree that the lack of symmetry is more than compensated by the windows on the left. Spent 3.5 hours in here, it was wonderful to see sunshine illuminating the interior for a change. BTW, this was not the type of panorama you are thinking of - I used the shift to correct the perspective - this was more like Theo Jacobs technique where the camera was rotated and then the two processed HDR overlapping images stitched together. I think this way avoids problems with vignetting. More to come...Cheers, RickDB Link to comment
spenaloza 0 Posted May 8, 2008 Love the perspective and light in this shot, excellent done, Felicidades & saludos //Salvador Link to comment
RickDB 10 Posted May 9, 2008 ..this is one of my favorite churches, I have visited it several times and until I joined PN could not begin to capture its beauty on "film". It was Dennis Aubrey who enlightened me with his pictures using the Canon 24mm Tilt/shift lens. The interesting thing with this shot is that it is two upright frames stitched together, but despite including more in the field of view the extra width lessens the drama of a single shot down the aisle. Cheers, RickDB Link to comment
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