While I was away at the weekend I took the time to grab a few photos that I wanted to turn into a panorama. I was not able to set everything up with a tripod etc, but thought it would be worth a try hand held. I was shooting with my 20D using a Sigma 20-40 2.8 EX DG at 20mm. I used Manual exposure mode but with a +-1 stop bracket shot in continuous mode incase I wanted to do an HDR with it as well. I did a 360 degree with a full frame of overlap at the ends, doing a total of 24 frames at each exposure setting. I ended up using f5.6 and 1/640s. As I shot quite late in the afternoon the sun was only just out of frame in the shots facing west, so I used one of those shots to set up the processing, in order to recover the highlight detail. As I had shot in manual, and made sure that I had only used the shots with the same settings, I then pasted the conversion to the other 23 images. I expected that this would give me a reasonably consistent conversion across all 24 images. Ithen sent them to CS5 and had them auto stitched. I then cloned / Content aware filled the "gaps" around the edges. This was the result.
Stickledown Panorama
The original is approx 22600×2260 pixels.
I was very surprised to see the amount of variation is apparent exposure between the images taken facing west and those to the North/South while images to the East were about half the difference. Also I was surprised that although the image sequence started at the gate, and moved clockwise this has been placed about halfway into the finished result. This scene is usually viewed by looking North which I had expected to become the center of the image while south was at the ends, so that it looked familiar to those that know the area.
So I went back to LR and reprocessed the images to get the exposure looking consistent across the 24 exposures. The darkest images I had to up the exposure slider by 2/3rds of a stop to match and at the same time I pulled the black point up to stop any clipping. That varied by up to 35 points. I then had CS5 do it's thing again, and filled in the gaps around the edges. This is the finished result.
IMAGE LINK: http://www.flickr.com/photos/alan-evans/8721723483/
Stickledown Panorama
Much better, but maybe could still do with a little tweaking of exposure in places. Here is a link to the full size 22K pixel wide image
So has anyone any ideas what would cause such apparent differences in shots taken in the same light with the same exposure settings and identical processing?
Thanks
Alan









