Thursday’s Task

AlanLichty

Moderator
I started taking panorama sequences with film cameras long before I had any clue how I was going to combine them for a final image. The first time I tried this was at Mooney Falls in 1967 on the same hike in Havasu Canyon as the waterfall I posted yesterday in the waterfall thread. The falls were too high to fit in the frame of my twin lens reflex camera so I took a vertical sequence of two shots. I never saw the combined result until 50 years later when I scanned the Ektachrome slides and stitched them in Lightroom:

MooneyFalls2b.jpg


I took another 2 shot vertical panorama sequence on 35mm film in the 1970's at the Khazneh in Petra Jordan:

KhaznehPano.jpg


This all got a lot more rewarding with digital cameras. This next one is a 3 shot pano using a TS-E lens to shift the view of the scene at Monument Valley:

MVMorningPano2.jpg


Same technique with 3 shots and a TS-E lens in Silver Falls State Park:

RimTrailPano.jpg


A 9 portrait shot pano of a nice sunset at Ruby Beach in Olympic National Park:

Ruby2-7-10PanoFull.jpg
 

John Holbrook

Well-Known Member
I started taking panorama sequences with film cameras long before I had any clue how I was going to combine them for a final image. The first time I tried this was at Mooney Falls in 1967 on the same hike in Havasu Canyon as the waterfall I posted yesterday in the waterfall thread. The falls were too high to fit in the frame of my twin lens reflex camera so I took a vertical sequence of two shots. I never saw the combined result until 50 years later when I scanned the Ektachrome slides and stitched them in Lightroom:

View attachment 81498

I took another 2 shot vertical panorama sequence on 35mm film in the 1970's at the Khazneh in Petra Jordan:

View attachment 81499

This all got a lot more rewarding with digital cameras. This next one is a 3 shot pano using a TS-E lens to shift the view of the scene at Monument Valley:

View attachment 81500

Same technique with 3 shots and a TS-E lens in Silver Falls State Park:

View attachment 81501

A 9 portrait shot pano of a nice sunset at Ruby Beach in Olympic National Park:

View attachment 81502
Alan, all beautiful panoramas you’ve shared. Thank you and thank you for your history of panoramas as well. My favorites are the Ruby Beach and Monument Valley images! Love the light captured in both. I also like the “centered” composition of the Silver Falls pano as well. Nice.
 

John Holbrook

Well-Known Member
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John Holbrook

Well-Known Member
Here are a couple from my archive:

Sunrise at Cottonwood Pass



Roadside view on I70 in Utah.
Larry, the two panoramas you’ve shared are well composed landscapes—love the shadows and light in your Cottonwood Pass composition with the body of water centered. Very nice. I also like the road leading into the I-70 composition. I also like the layers of color depicted here as well—very nice. Thank you for sharing.
 

John Holbrook

Well-Known Member
I don't do many stitched Panos, although I do crop to Pano aspect ratio often. For this task the images are stitched ones.

Banff, Canada
View attachment 81526

Reflection Lakes, Alaska
View attachment 81527

Dante View, Death Valley
View attachment 81528

A sunrise drone image from the comforts of my driveway
View attachment 81529
From your driveway, Jameel?!?!? I am equally impressed by your sunrise drone image (wow!) and your location! Oh by the way, convenience aside, this is my favorite image. I do also love the Banff image as well—very nice! The Death Valley pano is another beautiful capture, framed by the rocky foreground expanse to the subtle and beautiful colors beyond. The well-named Reflection Lakes is a beautiful capture too. Thank you for sharing each of these!
 
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