Hi,
Sorry with the delay in updates on this project, having a baby kinda put a hold on stuff for a bit!
www.studio-beni.net/final.html
Here is an updated (almost, arrows need work) final copy of the virtual tour, the difference being the new 'main' pano which it starts with taken with my new Sigma 8mm!
I got it wrong, I shot with the lens in horizontal rather than vertical so the pano isn't quite 180 degrees vertically, I've also discovered that although you can do it with just 3 frames, 5 is better! Moving subjects are a problem with such a wide frame of view, there is almost always something moving somewhere in a frame which won't be moving in the overlapping frame in an outdoor scene. Autopano however is magic and that plus exporting as a layered PSD makes it all easy.
However! Firstly it's incredibly sharp, far sharper than any fisheye lens using only half the frame deserves to be, couldn't believe it when I zoomed in. It is so incredibly fast to work with, the same pano done previously with the 16-35L took a lot longer, far more frames and was much harder to stitch. This fisheye is going to make my life incredibly easy for stitching. The final 360 degree stitch is around 20 megapixels or in other words far more than enough for web use even at full screen. The lens also seems to compress DR strangely, no idea how or why but it does make the inability to use a grad filter or polarizer far more palatable when there is so much DR!
In other words, incredibly happy to have this lens and to my anonymous benefactor, thank you so very much again, when I get the hang of using it I will be making it sing!
I'm still getting shimmering/moire on sharp edges of the pano's even though I've dropped the field of sharp view down in Autopano Tour to 2000 to mitigate the worst, it does give somewhat more blurred edges to the tour but the overall result is far superior.
I was also using my new Hoya Pro 1 Digital polarizer for other images on the shoot, I'd had a B+W polarizer but only in 77mm and my 16-35 is a huge 82mm filter size. I finally sold the B+W and bought the Hoya. It's very well made, very smooth and easy to use (much easier to rotate than the B+W) and the image quality is very good (cheap polarizers look awful). It made my life so much easier when trying to hold blue skies without resorting to a nasty HDR look and it was most welcome, I'll post some pictures when I finish them.