I am hoping to instigate everyone to contribute one or many of their favorite Panoramas from rides throughout our beautiful planet. I used to go through the painstaking process of creating a panorama quite rarely because adjusting the levels and contrast of each shot was nothing other than a PITA. I recently got a Canon S50 which has a awesome Pan feature which essentially locks the lights levels to the first pic you take, thus assembly is a snap. It still requires some photoshop magic, but the time and effort needed has been dramatically reduced. None of the following are perfect, but I only spent 5 minutes a piece creating them. The pics below range from 3 shots to 7 shots to create the panorama. The first 5 were taken on the same road. Highway 103 from Evergreen to Idaho Springs: Near Squaw Pass: Approaching Echo Lake. The flatlands can be seen on the horizons. Approaching Idaho Springs: The next two are in the 11 mile canyon just west of Pikes Peak near Colorado Springs: I find that these shots capture the essence of the environment with the power to almost make you believe you were there. :huh Well, not really, but almost. Please share your pans, comments and opinions.
Are you telling us,you don't even need a special camara or one of does fancy tripods,,or a miliion hours of photo shop to make pictures like that:huh
Actually, your Elevenmile Canyon pictures are not of Elevenmile Canyon. They are the South Platte area above Elevenmile Reservoir. The Canyon is BELOW the Reservoir and looks like this
here's a link to a shot taken near Taos NM: http://setthemfree.com/pictures/big_dog/taos_sky.html (it's a PNG so it might not work in all browsers)
Great stuff guys, here's some Kiwi panoramas This is the view from my home. I've had to reduce the quality a lot to get it under 160k. Is there any way around this? SmugMug I s'pose.
My turn... Here's a dry lake just before the ghost town of Balarat in Death Valley National Monument. A little further south is the Trona Spires State Park. Canon S30 using panorama mode and Photostitch to put it together. Hey Nachtflug! There's lots of wacky scenery in DV!
Here are some of my faves: Slate Creek, on the way to Pearl Pass: Double Rainbow in Crested Butte View west, from Timberline Trail Kelli on American Flag Mountain Pawk, LOVE the fall river pass shot! captures our Colorado weather and the feeling of the high mountains...
1 Take your time and make sure you keep the horizon a consistant height in the frame 2 Don't use too wide an angle lens. Around 50 - 70 mm zoom (or whatever the digital equivalent is) is best. 3 Make sure you get about 30% - 50% overlap on adjacent shots 4 Objects in the foreground will fuck you up! Can anybody add anything???