stevewwoo wrote:
WOW--all that from just a G5? very nice.
thanks for the tip--i hadnt even thought about not using the stitch mode.
There is one pano in that gallery that was shot with an A80, all the rest were shot with a G5.
When you shoot in stitch mode, the camera will set the exposure based on the first shot and use those same settings for all subsequent shots. When you shoot in Manual, it gives you a bit more flexibility. Photostitch does not care whether you shot the images using the stitch mode or not.
gardenstate wrote:
Please describe your workflow (techniques and software to us)
Bottomline, the technique is not much different than shooting single shots. Probably the two main drivers for me to shoot panos is so I am not limited to the 7.2mm (35mm equivalent) wide angle of the G5, or to create higher resolution images than the G5 can take in a single shot, or both. Mostly both.
I do use a panohead for most of the panos, although it really is only needed for panos with a lot of foreground interest and/or long exposure times. I do shoot a fair amount of blended (HDR) panos to increase the dynamic range, especially for the "magic hour" sunrises and sunsets.
As far as stitching software, I use PT Assembler. More info at www.tawbaware.com
. There is an active pano forum on the Tawbaware site. You will learn a lot there, whether you use PTAssembler or not.
For blending and general post processing, I use Picture Window Pro.