Ok
Not something unique, maybe boring (not for me). If you don't like it
as a panorama you are invited to act as a virtual photographer and
select your personal viewpoint and cropping with your mouse.

http://www.bmt.tue.nl/panorama/stjantechniek/stjantechniekpano2.htm

This one was very easy. A macro panorama however is a technical
challenge. A non boring sofa pano is a real challenge, I must try this
in the next days  :)

Toine

On 3/22/06, Shel Belinkoff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The plethora of panoramas posted here in recent weeks is interesting from a
> technical standpoint, but for the most part they are boring and
> uninteresting photos - at best a documentary of some space that looks good
> spread out over a wide number of pixels.  I've seen nothing original,
> nothing that's not been seen before, no matter how well executed or pretty
> the scenes may be.  Skylines and beaches seem to be a dominant theme ...
> often patched together from segments that by themselves would be of little
> interest on many levels.
>
> I liked what Bob Sullivan tried to do with his panorama of a few runners in
> the park on an early morning?  In some ways it wasn't as finely executed as
> some of the technological tours de force others have posted, but what made
> it outstanding is that Bob was working with a relatively closed and small
> space, trying to capture something more intimate.
>
> So, here's a panorama challenge:  make something different, maybe a macro
> panorama, or one of some everyday object like a sofa or a car, or of
> something in your house.
>
> Shel
>
>
>

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