Am 12.05.26 um 20:16 schrieb [email protected]:
Paul I agree with you except in one scenario - movement in the frame.

...as well as rapid changes in the light, e.g. on a partly cloudy day or in industrial environments. This shot with a Noblex* rotating lens camera took a full two hours of repeated lens rotations for a combined 2 minute exposure. No chance of doing this with a stitched panorama as the two quenching towers would produce their steam plumes alternately and at random intervals:

https://www.fotocommunity.de/photo/zwei-stunden-seraing-panoralfd/49479641

And not to forget the Zen factor. While the camera was doing its thing, I was sitting in the car, totally relaxed, listening to a CD I had just bought that day. An experience I wouldn't want to miss. For me, photography isn't all about speed and efficiency.

Ralf

*) https://luminous-landscape.com/noblex-150ux/

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Ralf R. Radermacher  -  Köln/Cologne, Germany
Blog  : http://the-real-fotoralf.blogspot.com
Audio : http://aporee.org/maps/projects/fotoralf
Fotos : https://www.fotocommunity.de/user_photos/770012
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