you need to try some panorama software to see if they will make life easier
enough for you to use them.

http://www.panoguide.com/

i use PhotoVista, now published by www.iSeeMedia.com. i don't have problems
printing panoramas up to about 12000 pixels wide by about 3000 high from
Photoshop on my system. i have used the 13 inch panorama paper cut to about
40 inches long, just a bit short of the 44 inch maximum that the Epson 1280
printer driver supports. some of my panoramas are at
http://users.bestweb.net/~hchong/Panoramas/Panoramas.htm. i have converted
most of them to QTVRs on the site, so you won't get as high resolution as
the originals. i use a Kaidan panoramic head for many of my panorama shots,
although i am changing over to a simpler setup to save some bulk and weight.

Herb....
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Mark Cassino" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, September 15, 2003 6:22 PM
Subject: First Pano Try


> The biggest problem was a differential in the glare off the water in the
> lower right quadrant.  The middle shot had virtually no glare, but when I
> rotated the camera by 60 degrees or so the camera picked up a lot of
glare.
> So I did a fair amount of PS work on the water and rocks there.  The other
> oddity is the apparent seam that runs vertically down the middle of the
> image...  That's smack dab in the middle of the second exposure and is
just
> the way the visual elements line up. Now I'm wondering if I should
> Photoshop it out as a distraction, or leave it there since, well, that's
> the way things looked.


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