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© Pankaj Purohit

The world famous heritage place "Amber" at Jaipur (India). This panormic image was created by stitching 14 vertical shots of the scene taken form "Jaigarh Palace", Jaipur. This panormic version can


pankaj purohit

Merged 14 photographs of the scene to make a panormic scene. Level and curves adjusted in software. Final print size is 8" X 54".

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© Pankaj Purohit

From the category:

Landscape

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Due to some uploading size limitaions, I can not upload a good sized

version to see all the fine details in this picture. This is created by

stiching 14 vertical shots tegether. This picture can be printed upto

8"X54" (Print Area).

 

Please see it larger and tell me how do you find it ...?

 

Thanks.

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Interesting shot. At first I thought I was looking at the Great Wall of China. :-) Good stitching job, but it feels a bit tight. I find it particularly unfortunate that the right hill in the background is cropped at the top. Greens seem a little oversaturated. Looks like a great place to visit.
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Pankaj, what have you done? Absolutely awesome image. Like Marsel, I too thought how did Pankaj transplant the Great Wall of China into Jaipur?:-) I must confess that I have never seen anything like this before of Amber Palace,Jaipur. From where did you take this shot? Heartiest congratulations.
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Great job! This is the first real panorama I have seen on this website. I think that it must have taken some courage and some foresight and visualization to plan out this project properly and bring it to completion.

 

7/7 and here's why:

7 on originality because most people don't even have the guts to try to do something like this, including me. I shoot film, and even if I switched over to digital, this project would have been way too complex for me. I'm surprised you even thought of it.

 

7 on aesthetics. If you look along the top left corner of the image, you will see a faint trace of a blue haze; this is classic atmospheric perspective draped over the forested mountains. Some people would have tried to edit that out; you kept it in; it adds depth and a feeling of reality to an unusual format for photography.

 

Detail: even though I cannot closely see everything in this download, I can see subtle changes in hue and tone that let me know fine details are there; like in the windows of the buildings; not just the close ones, but also those in the middle ground.

 

Hue and color; there are a strong variety of greens in this photo, and greens are some of the most difficult colors to work with because so many people see greens differently; these greens are put together very well.

 

Shadows and tone: even though this is a color photo, which usually emphasizes hue, there are important tonal details in it. For example, in the bottom left of the photo, the building casts small shadows onto the water of the lake. This helps to illustrate the height of some of the buildings near the shore. Shadows on the brick wall running along the ridgeline are essential to showing us what it is.

 

I have never seen this place before; but, I think here you have done a terrific job. Great work! J.

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Great panorama, very nice job. I'm so sorry I haven't visited this place but India is so enormously big!

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