Hi,

I haven't read the rest of the thread, but thought I'd chip blindly in anyway.

For quick & easy just-in-case panoramas I use ICE (from Microsoft Research that 
is).
http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/um/redmond/groups/ivm/ICE/

Free, quick and looks like it supports RAW images as well.
(You literally drag the images into the viewport & it does the rest)

A nodal head would be the best to avoid any parallax, but if most of the detail 
is more distant it shouldn't matter too much.

Adam.

---------------------

http://www.linkedin.com/in/adamseeleyuk

https://vimeo.com/adamseeley






>________________________________
> From: Paul Griswold <[email protected]>
>To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> 
>Sent: Sunday, 1 December 2013, 21:42
>Subject: Re: OT: shooting panoramas
> 
>
>
>Thanks guys -
>
>
>Sorry if I wasn't clear in my description.  I'm not advising them, or 
>consulting them on how to take or make panoramic imagery.  During some talks I 
>mentioned that having panoramas for the locations would be handy.  Based on 
>what I was told, I don't think there's any reason for HDRI's for this project, 
>but having a panorama for each location could be helpful.  This isn't a VFX 
>project, so matching the lighting exactly isn't really a big issue - it's a 
>documentary that might involve some 3D motion graphics that need to live in 
>the real world.  So having the graphics reflect the environment would be nice, 
>but IMHO it's not going to kill the project if it doesn't happen.
>
>
>Unfortunately just by mentioning the subject it opened a can of worms where 
>the DP started peppering me with questions.  
>
>
>But it sounds like the best answer may be to just suggest if the DP doesn't 
>know how to do it, they find a still photographer who has and hire him/her to 
>take care of it.
>
>
>Thanks!
>
>
>Paul
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>ᐧ
>
>
>
>On Sun, Dec 1, 2013 at 2:30 PM, Christian Freisleder <[email protected]> 
>wrote:
>
>Hey Paul,
>>
>>most of the time, if you just need the hdr for lighting and blurry
    reflections and you can be sure there won't be any crisp reflections
    (glass, crome) in the render, there is no need to over complicate
    things.
>>I use an 180° fisheye lens on a regular tripod with a standard 3 way
    head. 
>>I do1 exposure set every 120°(every leg of the tripod) and skip the
    top and nadi shot for outdoors and just use the stamp brush  in
    photoshop to clean out black or wrong spots.
>>this gives you the correct lighting and something thats reflecting
    the correct colors.
>>For this you don't even need a camera with a big sensor, just a
    camera that does proper bracketing.
>>If you have reflective objects that need clear and crisp reflections
    thats NOT the way to go, then you need to do It properly and the hdr
    labs link is a good resource.
>>
>>for stitching i would use ptgui, as most of the time It's just one
    click and finish. I think hugin ist free and almost the same, but
    not as comfortable as ptgui. At least when I was trying it about 2
    years back.
>>hope that helps
>>Christian
>>
>>
>>
>>On 30.11.2013 22:46, Steven Caron wrote:
>>
>>if there is time and a budget for capturing set data, reference and spherical 
>>HDRIs... then do it! saves time on the backend when doing lighting. removes 
>>any guesswork from just having a plate. 
>>>
>>>
>>>i think the hdr labs forum is a great place to also ask questions
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>On Sat, Nov 30, 2013 at 1:21 PM, Paul Griswold 
>>><[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>Hey guys,
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>I am helping out on a documentary that's being shot in China & the subject 
>>>>of shooting spherical panoramas came up.  For what these guys are doing, I 
>>>>don't really think there's a need to shoot HDRI's, but I do think having 
>>>>panoramas would come in handy.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>The problem is, I'm being peppered with questions by the DP about the 
>>>>subject (things like, "this requires a nodal head, right?") and honestly 
>>>>I've never shot a single panorama in my life.  I think the DP is way 
>>>>overcomplicating & overthinking things, but since I have no experience I 
>>>>don't want to give him bad advice or information.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>I sent him a link to the sIBL tutorial page ( 
>>>>http://www.hdrlabs.com/tutorials/ )  and that just added to the amount of 
>>>>questions I'm being hit with.  So I was hoping someone on the list might 
>>>>have some experience with this subject & could share some info & advice.
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>Thanks,
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>Paul
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>>ᐧ
>>>
>>
>
>
>

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