02-20-2018 06:50 PM
@Nick-Hobgood this is fantastic display its great to have you aboard im liking this a lot
@Nick-Hobgood wrote:
@DavidTito I use a Canon SL1, Tokina 10-17mm lens and a Nodal Ninja panoramic head to take my panos. The DSLR allows for HDR which helps even out the light intensity from pointing at the sun on one side and heavy shadows on the other. A picture of my gear below.
@Nick-Hobgood wrote:
@DavidTito I use a Canon SL1, Tokina 10-17mm lens and a Nodal Ninja panoramic head to take my panos. The DSLR allows for HDR which helps even out the light intensity from pointing at the sun on one side and heavy shadows on the other. A picture of my gear below.
02-20-2018 06:52 PM
02-21-2018 06:33 AM
@PushpendraKhadka Wow, very good with a phone. I tried once with my Android and Street view app and it was a disaster. There are inexpensive holders for cell phones that keep the camera centered as you rotate around, up and down. I think if you got one or made one to make sure you do not move your camera lens from the center, you will avoid lots of parallax, which is difference in the distance between objects between viewpoints. If you hold your finger in front of your face and look at it with only one eye and they only the other, the difference in the distance between your finger and a faraway object between views is parallax. The software cannot overlap images that have these differences very well. Check this out for a cheap solution that may give you ideas
02-24-2018 01:23 AM
@Nick-Hobgood great idea your invention
@Nick-Hobgood wrote:
@PushpendraKhadka Wow, very good with a phone. I tried once with my Android and Street view app and it was a disaster. There are inexpensive holders for cell phones that keep the camera centered as you rotate around, up and down. I think if you got one or made one to make sure you do not move your camera lens from the center, you will avoid lots of parallax, which is difference in the distance between objects between viewpoints. If you hold your finger in front of your face and look at it with only one eye and they only the other, the difference in the distance between your finger and a faraway object between views is parallax. The software cannot overlap images that have these differences very well. Check this out for a cheap solution that may give you ideas