Pizza at St Brelade's Bay, Jersey, 2004 |
by Brian |
We were eating a Pizza in a restaurant pretty much exactly where this shot was taken. It is actually about half a dozen shots stitched together.
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Matt
2 years, 11 months ago:
I'm interested to know what you used to stitch these photos together, as my efforts leave a much less polished finish.
Brian
2 years, 11 months ago:
Glad you like it.
Thinking back, two years ago, it would probably be Jasc Paint Shop Pro 8 - which I still use. It was a manual effort - not one of those auto-stitching tools you get.
The key is in the original photos, having a camera that allows you to lock everything down between shots, so the exposure is a close as possible between them helps a lot.
Make sure to leave a good overlap between each shot too.
Next, pull them all in as separate layers and then fine tune the colour balance, hue, saturation, etc. etc. until the colouring is as close as possible in each shot.
Then, line everything up, straightening as necessary, maybe even some perspective correction.
Tweak things by adjusting the tranparency between the layers at the edges to get a good mix at the join. Then start smudging and cloning around the join to get rid of the bits that are never going to line up.
There you go - five minutes and its done - or was it five weeks? ;)
Matt
2 years, 11 months ago:
I never thought of using transparency for this sort of thing (believe it or not).
In the end, I actually fell in with the look of joining up the segments as if you were pinning physical photographs together post development, so refuse to allow myself to do anything other than rotate + overlap these days.
Brian
2 years, 11 months ago:
Thanks :D
The transparency also helps when getting the colouring right between the layers. Mucking about with the layer order whilst they are overlapping also helps.
If you look close you'll see that the coluring isn't right between either end. I tend to get the colouring roughly correct among all the shots and then work across matching each one more closely to its neighbour so you get a bit of drift as you go.
It's a shame it comes out so small here. The original is 7936 x 1428.
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Matt
2 years, 11 months ago:
I have already closely examined the 7936x1428 version...
Brian
2 years, 11 months ago:
Last time I tried all I could see was "Medium".
I Must have been looking at a smaller image.
fipsut
2 years, 10 months ago:
It would be really really cool, if a photo was 360 degrees and the scrollbar of the photo would never end...just keep rotating and rotating.
Brian
2 years, 10 months ago:
Gareth
2 years, 8 months ago:
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