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1

Monday, June 21st 2010, 8:35pm

3.4 gigapixel pano-combination

When i started with hires-panos the visiting of several spherical gigapixel-panos (360x180 dgrees) was a little bit disappointing to me (the expected "deep-zoom-feeling") - the same with my own ones i tried. Maybe reading values like 1.5 Gpixels or 3 Gpixels pushed my speculation for this feeling but i of course know that this lot of pixels distribute all over a sphere, so that it doesent leave so much for zooming to a special view.

But in most scenes you have huge areas of the picture building foreground of no interest and detailless blue heaven.

So i tried a combination like this - it combines a hires partial pano (horizontal areas) and a standard setup pano with fisheye for the spherical completion.

What do you think about it?
I´ll try to fuse it better in future...

In detail:

the hires-part shot with Canon 5D II + 85mm 1.2 L / 2 Rows á 32 pic // leading to 650-700 Mpix for the horizon (82115 pix wide)
the lowres-part shot with Canon 1Ds II + 15mm fisheye / 6 around + Z // leading to 92 Mpix spherical pano
these 2 panos then were fused in one (Photoshop); interpolating the small one to the 82115 px width
of the hires part leads to a (technical) 3.4 Gpix spherical pano with really fine details in the horizon regions of interest...
best regards from www.PanAustria.com

michel

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2

Monday, June 21st 2010, 9:38pm

Hi PanAustria,

It looks great... as the sky and the ground are not of a lot of interest, it seems enough in my opinion... and for a 'normal' viewer it should be difficult to see the less high resolution regions...

Great pano and panning steps intro *thumbup* .

SAlut.

Shanti

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3

Monday, June 21st 2010, 9:40pm

this seems VERY interesting, so the sky is from the "small" pano and the rest was taken with a 85mm ? thats clever, would have to try it sometime :)

Tuur

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4

Tuesday, June 22nd 2010, 10:36am

Nice!! and Smart!!

;-)

you did change the lens flares didn't you?
Can you shar ehow you did that?

Thanx
Tuur *thumbsup*

5

Tuesday, June 22nd 2010, 10:59am

Great Result!

Very intresting combination of low and hi rez.

Recently brought some panos from Sagarmatha, and doubt if it is possible to combine it with low-rez VR pano. Your example inspires me to try))

Can you tell what is the final size of your example in MB's (the folder with comlete set of files)?

6

Tuesday, June 22nd 2010, 5:22pm

thank you for the replies!
Can you tell what is the final size of your example in MB's (the folder with comlete set of files)?
-->
The final size on the server is 640 MB; it depends of the jpg compression as well -
here in this tour the starting pano is buildt the same way (and pixelsize) and althoug the hires-part of it is just a one-row capture (against 2 rows from the pano shown at the start of the thread) it uses 840MB serverside...
---> sorry for the less perfect fusing of hires- and lowres-pano here, but there was 1 week(!!) between shooting both of them - in such case it is nearly impossible to meet exactly the same cameraposition...


you did change the lens flares didn't you?
Can you shar ehow you did that?
id did change it and will look for the files and settings (half a year passed...) and publish it here.

best regards
best regards from www.PanAustria.com

lily

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7

Friday, June 25th 2010, 8:08am

Excellent~~~!!! *thumbsup* It's so cool~~!!! How did u do it~!
Hi All,My name is Lily. It's great to be here. *tongue* I like photography and making some panorama pictures. *smile*

However, I'm not good at computer languages for making panorama pictures. *unsure* I have many questions.

Any help would be highly appreciated! *love*

dany89vl

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Location: Ramnicu Valcea | Sibiu , Romania

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8

Saturday, June 26th 2010, 11:43am

Hey PanAustria, your panoramas are just great.
I have one question: How did you make take butterfly to fly in the panorama?
__________________________________________
Regards,
Daniel Purece - 360Concept
www.360concept.ro

9

Sunday, June 27th 2010, 11:06am

How did you make take butterfly to fly in the panorama?
It´s not that difficult:

1) you first have to build (or use a ready-to-use) an animated swf. In my case i did animate the butterfly (flash of course) with moving wings and saved it to a swf.
2) define a hotspot in krpano script with this swf-url and set its starting ath & atv values to the left screenborder
3) define sutable v_diff value for the vertical amplitude of its up/down movement (1 used a value of 6) and store it as a hotspot attribute.

4) the horizontal movement is a simple tween action: tween(ath, hor_dest, 80, linear). "hor_dest" is added before from the current ath plus an offset (set the offset to 1080 and it will turn around 3 times, then stops).

5) the vertical movement is a recursive loop action: if you call "but_vTween(6)" and define
<action name="but_vTween">
add(tmp, get(hotspot[butterfly].atv), %1);
tween(hotspot[butterfly].atv, get(tmp), 1, easeOutQuad, mul(v_diff, get(v_diff), -1); but_vTween(v_diff));
</action>
it will move up and down additional to its hor movement – as you have seen it in the pano - because the done-action of this tween inverts the v_diff value first and then calls itself with this inverted v_diff as parameter...

i hope it helped!
best regards from www.PanAustria.com

rbackhaus

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10

Friday, August 20th 2010, 6:32am

very nice and smart,...will give it a try,....the sky always kills me......beautiful shot of people, the mountains, and the dams

moeller-j

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11

Thursday, October 21st 2010, 10:27pm

yep, real smart to combine hi-res and low res. anyone who tried to stitch gigas with a not-so-pro equipment will appreciate.

best regards

Posts: 83

Location: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

Occupation: Retired S/W engineer

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12

Thursday, November 11th 2010, 2:44pm

Practically perfect!

My only criticism is that you should (if possible) turn off krpano's sharpening feature for zoomed out views, where it creates an unnatural "sparkle"; only use it for highly magnified views, where it really helps.

Taking spherical panos with two or more lenses would be natural if stitching s/w would support combining those images directly. But I have not been able to get either Hugin or PTGui to stitch image sets with mixed lenses, even though both nominally support that.

Regards, Tom

alexedo

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13

Tuesday, December 7th 2010, 8:28am

Congratulations for your pano I enjoyed alot seeing it. As my fellows I will try to combine Hi Low Resolutions I think it is very smart way for some projects.
Alex Edo Photography
Virtual tours - 360 photography - Portraits

www.alexedo.com

14

Thursday, December 16th 2010, 9:25pm

That's a very nice view!

15

Monday, December 20th 2010, 8:25pm

Wow! Nice place. That's where we didn't want to pay the bus last year ;). Now I did see that nice place, thank you :).