>From the June 2007 issue of Shutterbug, "Techniques" by Joseph A. Dickerson:

"First and foremost, be certain that the camera is level. It must also 
remain level as you pan through the images you plan on stitching. A tripod 
equipped with a leveling stage can be a great asset but at the very least 
use a bubble level that fits in your camera's hot shoe. Rehearse the shot a 
couple of times to be certain of the alignment and overlap of the images.

If you are shooting with a wide angle lens you'll need more overlap. 
Something approaching 50 percent is about right. If you use a telephoto lens 
an overlap of 20 percent or so will be adequate.

Shooting panoramas is one time when you want to leave the polarizing filter 
in the bag. Otherwise the sky won't match from shot to shot. You'll also 
want to turn off the camera's automatic exposure system. I generally will do 
the complete panorama several times, bracketing the exposure settings or 
shooting in raw. Watch for things that move-waves in a coastal scenic, for 
example, will almost guarantee that you'll have problems with stitching.

The best advice I can offer is to practice at home in the back yard or at 
the neighborhood park. A trip to some distant locale is not the place to try 
to figure out what you're doing.

Oh yeah, while you're practicing, let the kids get into each shot. They'll 
love showing up as triplets or quintuplets, and so will grandma." 


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