Pano shots that need help (C&C)


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Johnston

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Took these panos with 7D, 17-35mm. Set at AP. Use Autostitch software to do the panos.
Something seems wrong. First, the pic dont seems to be sharp, etc. Any bro can advise and comment. I know I should use M setting to take the shots, but, dont know how leh. Btw, it was set at F8. :sweat:

SurfersParadise.jpg


PunggolBeach.jpg
 

Hello from my screen it seems to be sharp. But maybe you need to post a bigger picture in order to see clearly here.
 

Photos too small to judge sharpness. Look at your source photos, if it's not sharp the final picture will not be as well.
 

Hi Johnston...

For best results with zooms like that 17-35. I would recomend pull back to around 30mm 24mm position and use the camera in vertical(portrait) orientation. This is to put some reduction to barelling due to wide angle at its extremes and also reduce overall wide angle light fall-off at its corners (vignetting). Then take more shots to make the smae coverage resulting in higher resolution final pics.
 

There's nothing wrong with your panos... if the original shots were not sharp, your final would not be sharp...

And also, in Autostitch, u need to change the JPEG quality settings to the highest quality (I set mine to 75, I think max is 100) otherwise the final pano is downsampled and looks pixelated... maybe that's what u are referring to...

Agree with Sulhan that u need to use vertical perpsective when shooting using a wide angle zoom... otherwise the barrel distortion at the wide end will spoil the pano... I shoot at 17mm and usually each of my shots cover >50% of the previous shot... that works out to about 11 shots or more for a 180 degree pano... worth the effort cos u get really smooth and distortion free panos... see my gallery for some examples...

Shoot using manual mode.... just set the camera to aperture priority first and set the desired aperture. Usually I use f/16 on bright sunny day like in your two panos. Then meter the scene by depressing the shutter button halfway. Remember the shutter speed and aperture. Do it for the extreme left and right and then middle of the scene that u want to take as a pano. Add all the shutter speeds together and then take the average (if the three readings are different). Set that shutter speed plus f/16 (or whatever aperture u used earlier) when in the manual mode of your camera. Just start shooting at that setting... U will get even exposure for all shots regardless of how many u shoot... the software will have a much easier time stitching everything together...
 

Hi Johnston...

For best results with zooms like that 17-35. I would recomend pull back to around 30mm 24mm position and use the camera in vertical(portrait) orientation. This is to put some reduction to barelling due to wide angle at its extremes and also reduce overall wide angle light fall-off at its corners (vignetting). Then take more shots to make the smae coverage resulting in higher resolution final pics.

Thanks, bro Sulhan. Will take note on that.
 

There's nothing wrong with your panos... if the original shots were not sharp, your final would not be sharp...

And also, in Autostitch, u need to change the JPEG quality settings to the highest quality (I set mine to 75, I think max is 100) otherwise the final pano is downsampled and looks pixelated... maybe that's what u are referring to...

Agree with Sulhan that u need to use vertical perpsective when shooting using a wide angle zoom... otherwise the barrel distortion at the wide end will spoil the pano... I shoot at 17mm and usually each of my shots cover >50% of the previous shot... that works out to about 11 shots or more for a 180 degree pano... worth the effort cos u get really smooth and distortion free panos... see my gallery for some examples...

Shoot using manual mode.... just set the camera to aperture priority first and set the desired aperture. Usually I use f/16 on bright sunny day like in your two panos. Then meter the scene by depressing the shutter button halfway. Remember the shutter speed and aperture. Do it for the extreme left and right and then middle of the scene that u want to take as a pano. Add all the shutter speeds together and then take the average (if the three readings are different). Set that shutter speed plus f/16 (or whatever aperture u used earlier) when in the manual mode of your camera. Just start shooting at that setting... U will get even exposure for all shots regardless of how many u shoot... the software will have a much easier time stitching everything together...

Million thanks, TME, for the insight. Will try more panos based on your advise.
 

Million thanks, TME, for the insight. Will try more panos based on your advise.

Try re-doing your previous panos using high quality JPEG setting... u might find a vast difference in quality for the final output.
 

Try re-doing your previous panos using high quality JPEG setting... u might find a vast difference in quality for the final output.

With Autostitch? How to set to high quality JPEG? :think:
 

With Autostitch? How to set to high quality JPEG? :think:

When u open Autostitch, click Edit then Options. Change the size (top left hand corner of window) to 100% and Memory to 100 (bottom right hand corner).
 

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