
A Stitch in Time… Using software to merge individual images into stunning panoramics.
By Jennifer Gidman Images by Ken Hubbard |
There’s no discounting the breathtaking beauty of a well-made panoramic shot. In creating such an image, you’re able to successfully capture the sweeping vistas and landscapes before you in all of their captivating 360-degree glory. |
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These wide-format shots can be captured using cameras designed for this type of long, continuous exposure, or a photographer can take a group of individual pictures and overlap them until the final image is achieved. In the old days, this consisted of spreading prints out on a table and taping the backs together, but thanks to today’s technology, there are software programs that offer a more efficient, clean methodology. |
Photoshop and Panorama Maker can only do so much, however. The onus is still on the photographer to capture great images right from the get-go. These individual images need to have enough overlap and consistent exposures so they can be seamlessly stitched together. |
The first key element to capturing the images that will eventually comprise your panorama: a tripod. “A tripod helps keep you on a horizontal plane,” says Tamron field services manager Ken Hubbard, who shot the panorama featured here. “I start by leveling my camera on the tripod and pointing it at the center point of what is going to be my panoramic image. I then use either the grid in my viewfinder, or the bubble levels on my tripod, to make sure I’m level with the horizon.” |
The next step is to loosen the panning knob on the tripod and turn the camera to the furthest left-hand point that you want in your image. “I usually frame slightly past the left-side point, because there’ll be some cropping later in the panoramic process,” explains Hubbard. “I take the first image, then turn the camera to the right, slightly overlapping the first and second images by approximately 15 percent (meaning 15 percent of the right side of the first image should be part of the left-hand side of the second). I continue turning the camera and slightly overlapping the images until I reach the right side of the desired panorama.” |
Depending on the scene and the effect you're going for, you can shoot either horizontally or vertically. “In the example I show here, I decided to use horizontal images because I didn’t care for what would have appeared in the panorama if I showed more above and below,” explains Hubbard. “Shooting vertically, however, will work very well if you’re shooting a cityscape of tall buildings, for example, and if you can’t be far enough away to get them in horizontally.”
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Well-exposed (and evenly exposed) images are critical—they need to all be consistent exposure-wise. “I achieve this by shooting in aperture priority,” says Hubbard. “This way, if there is a change in the light between shots, the camera adjusts exposure with the shutter speed. If you use shutter priority, you run the chance of possibly having different depths of field; if you use manual, your exposures will all be different.” |
Piecing It All Together: The Photoshop Method
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A Photoshop Alternative: Using Panorama Maker
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