If shooting RAW, set all captures to the same RAW setting - anyone but auto.
Kenneth Waller
http://www.pentaxphotogallery.com/kennethwaller
----- Original Message -----
From: "steve harley" <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Semi-OT: Put yourself in my shoes for a moment . . .
on 2012-08-21 7:54 Larry Colen wrote
I didn't say that it was the best way, I just said that it was the
cheapest way.
actually, the cheapest way is to stitch hand-held shots; it works pretty
well if you practice a little; pano software can compensate for a lot;
i've only done a few of these, but here's my best effort yet, a 360-degree
panorama taken with K200d and 16-45 at 16mm (landscape orientation); i
would have loved to spend a day shooting with better equipment, but i shot
this in 70 seconds during a short pause in a long hike, nine overlapping
exposures in one take; i stitched with Hugin after basic adjustments in
Aperture:
<https://www.dropbox.com/sh/az0pvpwgc5u2sda/PoL8ruqA-A#f:needlespano-500.jpg>
most important is to use the same exposure for each shot, and find
reference points to keep your place both vertically and horizontally (and
keep your camera level); also allow a fair amount of overlap
from this experience i think a 20-24mm prime lens in portrait orientation
would do better (at the expense of more shots, and more care needed to do
it hand-held); i also learned that panoramic scenes tend to have a lot of
dynamic range — i shot this at f/9, 1/640, ISO 200, but i should have used
ISO 100 (and a K-5 would be a better tool for this scene)
--
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