World Wide Panorama Events: Best of 2007, Wrinkle in Time Contributions
I really encourage you to check out the work of all the photographers that have contributed to these projects. Not only did nearly 300 panoramic photographs contribute to these two projects, but most of the images can be seen full screen and all are geo-located on a map of the world so you can see where each image was photographed. A special thanks goes out to the organizers of the world wide panorama effort, as without them these last 17 events would not have taken place.
Wrinkle in Time
19 December 2007 marked the 10th anniversary of this initial event. The original Wrinkle in Time project is considered the first major, collaborative immersive, panoramic photography event. To enter the original event, your panoramic photograph was to be taken at the exact same time as the solstice in one's local area. 10 years later, the original event was commemorated by 165 photographers from every corner of the world taking an immersive, 360 degree panoramic photograph within a 12 hour window before and after the Solstice in the photographer's locale.
Since the Solstice passed at 10:08pm local time on 19 December, I elected to take a picture of Christmas lights in the neighborhood. My contribution for the Wrinkle in Time 2007 event can be viewed on the World Wide Panorama website.
[ View: Mike Morper's Wrinkle in Time 2007 panoramic photograph contribution ]
And for your Google Earth users, all of the photographed for this event can be viewed in Google Earth. Read More...
Car Extrication Demonstration at OCFA Open House
To see a version of this panorama you can pan around within, head over to my full screen panorama page.
Read More...
Sustenance: World Wide Panorama is Live
This time, over 200 photographers from all over the world contributed images (all shot between 19-23 September 2007) related to the theme of Sustenance.
One of the contributor's to the "Sustenance" VR photography event
Read More...
Orange County, California Picture Map
Click the picture above to view the Orange County, California picture map.
Read More...
Panoramic Photos of Kennedy Space Center, Seal Beach Pier, Fire Station Playhouse and Some Sanctuary
Here is the Rocket Garden at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida. This image was created using six photographs shot with a fisheye lens. Four horizontal shots (each at 90 degree increments) one pointing straight up and one straight down. Each of the images was handheld (as opposed to using a tripod and a pano head).
View "Kennedy Space Center Rocket Garden" in fullscreen
Read More...
Panoramic Photo of Cook’s Corner Biker Bar, Trabuco Canyon, California
Cook’s Corner is a “biker bar” tucked away in a small corner of Orange County California (yeah, the OC) where folks come out to show off their bikes. At any point in time, you’ll find over 50 immaculately painted, shining bikes that would make the guys at OC Choppers impressed. But something tells me, the day jobs these road hog riders require them to wear suits and ties.
Read More...
Panoramic Photos of Chateau Cheneceau, Balboa Fun Zone in Newport Beach, CA
Five days after our neighborhood nearly burned down, we found ourselves in the Loire Valley. This is one of the first panoramic photographs I took using a digital SLR. And it is still one of my favorites too.
[ View: See this image of the Chateau Cheneceau in fullscreen ] Read More...
Panoramic Photos of Covered Bridge, Log Bridge, Fire on a Hill
There is nothing quite like getting a call from a friend while you are 5,000 miles from home to find out there is a big fire in your neighborhood. Great work by the Orange County Fire Authority saved our whole neighborhood.
[ View: See this image of the Frontier Street Fire in fullscreen ]
Read More...
Immersive 360 Degree Panoramas Coming Back to www.morper.net
Read More...
New Book Available - Interactive Panoramas: Techniques for Digital Panoramic Photography
This book details all of the necessary steps
involved in panoramic photography: from the
production of digital and analog picture sequences,
"stitching" using software tools (like REALVIZ
Stitcher, VR Worx and PanoTools), all the way to
publishing interactive panoramas on the Web (e.g.,
using QuickTime VR, PTViewer and VRML). The book
introduces the production of cylindrical and
spherical panoramas, as well as object movies and
explains how to link individual panoramas to
virtual tours.
Bridges: A World Wide Panorama September 18-22, 2004
The theme for the next World Wide Panorama has been
announced. Bridges. It will be held September
18-22, 2004 (the Equinox is on the 22nd).
This will be the third time the The Geo-Images Project from UC
Berkeley has coordinated this worldwide
effort. For details on how to participate, the
official website will be
updated shortly.
Check Out the Last Two World Wide Efforts
On Saturday, March 20, 2004 more than 180
photographers in 40 countries around the world
celebrated the Equinox by creating VR panoramas.
This site showcases the
results of their efforts.
Mars Rover Opportunity: 3D 360 Degree Panoramic of Mars
After seeing the images
Hans Nyberg stitched together of the moon
landings, I decided to go up to the NASA
website and see what else they had posted. As it
turns out, there is tons of stuff. What I thought
was particularly cool was this image above (click
on it to see a larger view) produced by a set of
cameras with a slight offset to create this
anaglyphic image. Get those 3D glasses out (you can buy
'em at that link--$2 with PayPal) and checkout
the Mars surface in 3D!
XPoints: A Mac OS X Tool for Auto Selecting Control Points for Panoramic Images
Perhaps one of the most tedious parts of creating a
stitched, panoramic image produced from multiple
individual images is identifying the control points
in each image pair. What are control points?
Basically, control points are locations in two
adjoining (overlapping) images that are at the
exact same point.
To identify control points, one must have an
application like PTMac or PTGui which both have a great
user interface for creating the control point
pairs (click on the image to see a larger view).
To create a successful "stitch" of the source
images, there must be a minimum of three control
point pairs per set of neighboring images. So in
my case, I have 18 source images for this 360
degree panoramic image (18 x 3 = 64 control
point sets).
XBlend: A Mac OS X Tool for Blend Multi-Image Panoramic Images
Such was the case when I took a 14 image panoramic of the Polihale coast in Kauai last summer. All these images where shot at the same shutter speed/f-stop combination, but I still ended up having some shifts.
The image below was created with these 14 source images, then stitched together in PTMac.
When I first heard about Enblend, I thought it might be a nice addition to my panoramic image creation workflow. Recently, the developer of PTMac created a Mac OS X front-end UI for Enblend 1.3. Called XBlend, it takes as its source multiple TIFF images output from an application such as PTMac. So, I thought I would give it a try.
Read More...
360 Degree Panorama Photography How-To Series (Part 3) Equipment Matters
1. All photos must be taken from the same place
2. All photos must be taken while in alignment with the lens' nodal point
The first rule is pretty straight forward, so I'll skip over that. However, what's a nodal point and why does that matter? Read on...
The nodal point of a lens is the point inside a lens where light paths cross before being focused onto the film plane--or in the case of a digital camera--the CCD. When taking the pictures for a 360 degree panoramic image, you want to rotate the camera around an imaginary line that runs through (or very close to) the nodal point of the camera lens. Failing to do this may result in shifts in the placement of the subject matter in your photos, this is called parallax error. (Graphic to left liberated from the Manfrotto website. See link below)
Read More...
360 Degree Panorama Photography How-To Series: (Part 2) Types of Panoramic Images
Read More...
360 Degree Panorama Photography: How-To Series
I have been making 360 degree, panoramic
photographs for a few years now. When
completed, these images provide a unique way of
looking at the world around us. When these
panoramas are viewed on a computer, one has the
ability to pan around inside the image. Look
left, look right and even up and down. When
printed, the images create a new way to look at
something. The image above this paragraph
represents 360 degrees of view both vertically
as well as horizontally.
Virtual Tour of Fire Station Playhouse
I just completed a virtual tour of the playhouse I built
last summer. You need to have QuickTime
installed to view the tour. And a high speed
connection to the net wouldn't be bad either.
Sorry, the file is about 4.5MB right now.
The tour starts off inside the fire station. You
can look left, right. Even straight up and straight
down. Do you hear something? Yup, that's the winch
you hear. The winch is used to lower the door
beneath the stairs. And if you click on that door,
you will be taken out back behind the fire station.
Once outside, you can look around out there too.
Up, down, left, right... you get the idea. To get
back inside, just click in the door way.
Link: Fire station
playhouse virtual tour
