Michael Fontana
pro member
Hi, back again from holidays......
as I had to carry quite a lot of food for more than a week, I decided to be ultra-light in camera weight:
my good old 10 D and one lens only, the distagon 25; no tripod, no panohead.
Off course, I couldn' resist and made some 30 panos, handheld:
actually, fog and clouds have their own beauty, below is a example with fast-moving fog, which makes shooting a bit more difficult, while creating interesting, fast changing light situations:
the entire pano has to be captured very fast, meanwhile not shaking the camera, as two or three seconds later, the fog might cover the entire image:
This summer's rain made the grass especially green, untill the higher peaks; that old barn at 7000 feet moved through the time out of the verticale. The fast moving clouds require manual correction of the stitcher's CP-points, as they would distort the other image parths:
not far away from that barn, a view towards the other direction:
in october, I might get back to that spot, and capture that mountain in a night shot, with some moving stars; but I'm not sure if this will be stitchable - any experiences or insights about that problem? One single frame has to be exposed for about 5 - 10 minutes, so the stars will move between the different frames....
as I had to carry quite a lot of food for more than a week, I decided to be ultra-light in camera weight:
my good old 10 D and one lens only, the distagon 25; no tripod, no panohead.
Off course, I couldn' resist and made some 30 panos, handheld:

actually, fog and clouds have their own beauty, below is a example with fast-moving fog, which makes shooting a bit more difficult, while creating interesting, fast changing light situations:
the entire pano has to be captured very fast, meanwhile not shaking the camera, as two or three seconds later, the fog might cover the entire image:

This summer's rain made the grass especially green, untill the higher peaks; that old barn at 7000 feet moved through the time out of the verticale. The fast moving clouds require manual correction of the stitcher's CP-points, as they would distort the other image parths:

not far away from that barn, a view towards the other direction:

in october, I might get back to that spot, and capture that mountain in a night shot, with some moving stars; but I'm not sure if this will be stitchable - any experiences or insights about that problem? One single frame has to be exposed for about 5 - 10 minutes, so the stars will move between the different frames....