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i took 5 veritcal pictures side by side just moving the top half of my body from left to right.
then stitched them together when i got home
i was at work too. they called me up to a register, i looked outside and i told my manager and i quote "Holy shit youve got to let me go upstairs and get my camera"Last edited by Lizzard[MPE]; 8 May 2005, 00:24.
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Originally posted by Lizzard[MPE]i took 5 veritcal pictures side by side just moving the top half of my body from left to right.
then stitched them together when i got home
i was at work too. they called me up to a register, i looked outside and i told my manager and i quote "Holy shit youve got to let me go upstairs and get my camera"
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Originally posted by KvHagedornThat's a darned good job of steady hands and stitching, then. But for a little odd shading in the sky, it looks like you used a panorama camera.
i can see the lines myself in the picture. im not sure if other people can but it bothers me when i stitch a picture together i can still see the lines even after so much blending.
i think its just because i know where they are. i dunno. something i need to overcome.. or get a wide angle lens.
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Originally posted by Lizzard[MPE]i can see the lines myself in the picture. im not sure if other people can but it bothers me when i stitch a picture together i can still see the lines even after so much blending.
good photography too. I'm afraid any pics i have on my computer are pretty craptacular :P"And yet, after spending 20+ years trying to evolve the user interface into something better, what's the most powerful improvement Apple was able to make? They finally put a god damned shell back in." -jwz
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What are the spec s on the lens you are using ? What settings were you using ? It looks somewhat like vignetting, although with the overlapped images it could be an artifact of the blending. If it is present on the single frames, try stopping the lens down a stop or two and see if it goes away. If it does, then it is the design of the lens (particularly true for long zoom telephotos) and you can work around it by stopping down to some extent. The other thing that can cause that is a lens hood or similar obstruction near the lens face.
FrankLast edited by degrub; 9 May 2005, 20:41.
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It's a good thing I don't have a digital camera, otherwise you guys would get pictures of Winnipeg - ooOOoOOOo - scaryQ9450 + TRUE, G.Skill 2x2GB DDR2, GTX 560, ASUS X48, 1TB WD Black, Windows 7 64-bit, LG M2762D-PM 27" + 17" LG 1752TX, Corsair HX620, Antec P182, Logitech G5 (Blue)
Laptop: MSI Wind - Black
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Originally posted by degrubWhat are the spec s on the lens you are using ? What settings were you using ? It looks somewhat like vignetting, although with the overlapped images it could be an artifact of the blending. If it is present on the single frames, try stopping the lens down a stop or two and see if it goes away. If it does, then it is the design of the lens (particularly true for long zoom telephotos) and you can work around it by stopping down to some extent. The other thing that can cause that is a lens hood or similar obstruction near the lens face.
Frank
the camera im using is a Sony cyber-shot 5.0
its a Hoya 58mm lens
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