Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Panorama photography using two camera's
#9
The "easy" way will be using an anamorphic lens. You focus with a normal lens read from the distance scale, put the  anamorphic lens on, set the same distance and shoot.

 

You get a "squished" result, which you will have to unsquish in photoshop. You also get a wider FOV than you saw without the anamorphic lens.

 

The results are fundamentally the same as "cropping" (you do not , the advantage is that you do not cheat (cropping is kinda cheating, in a way, changing the framing that you actually shot). You do, however, get more vertical data. So you can choose to stretch the image horizontally instead, and end up with more detail than you would have gotten by cropping.

 

http://petapixel.com/2014/05/07/shooting...lens-dslr/

  


Messages In This Thread
Panorama photography using two camera's - by Reinier - 06-08-2014, 10:01 AM
Panorama photography using two camera's - by popo - 06-08-2014, 03:34 PM
Panorama photography using two camera's - by felix - 06-08-2014, 05:34 PM
Panorama photography using two camera's - by popo - 06-08-2014, 09:20 PM
Panorama photography using two camera's - by Reinier - 07-05-2014, 12:14 PM
Panorama photography using two camera's - by Brightcolours - 07-06-2014, 07:43 AM

Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread:
1 Guest(s)