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About This GigaPan
Toggle- Taken by
-
Greater Latrobe Community Network
- Explore score
- 72
- Size
- 0.34 Gigapixels
- Views
- 2155
- Date added
- May 17, 2009
- Date taken
- May 11, 2009
- Categories
- Galleries
- Competitions
- Tags
- fred, rogers, pa, mr, latrobe, glcn, vincent, st, svc, saint, latrobe_pa
- Description
-
The Fred M. Rogers Center at Saint Vincent College, Latrobe PA. In honor and memory of Latrobe native, Mister Rogers.
Stitcher Notes
ToggleMinimizeGigaPan Stitcher version 0.4.3864 (Windows)
Panorama size: 337 megapixels (39189 x 8614 pixels)
Input images: 240 (30 columns by 8 rows)
Field of view: 159.3 degrees wide by 35.0 degrees high (top=21.6, bottom=-13.4)
Settings:
All default settings
Original image properties:
Camera make: Canon
Camera model: Canon PowerShot SX100 IS
Image size: 3264x2448 (8.0 megapixels)
Capture time: 2009-05-12 02:54:52 - 2009-05-12 03:09:26
Aperture: f/4 - f/5
Exposure time: 0.0008 - 0.00625
ISO: 80 - 200
Focal length (35mm equiv.): 152.5 mm
Digital zoom: off
White balance: Automatic
Exposure mode: Automatic
Horizontal overlap: 61.4 to 64.3 percent
Vertical overlap: 62.8 to 65.1 percent
Computer stats: 3071.17 MB RAM, 2 CPUs
Total time 5:20:23 (1:20 per picture)
Alignment: 27:14, Projection: 17:38, Blending: 4:35:30

fetching snapshots...
The Gigapanographer Currently Known as "Kilgore661" (May 18, 2009, 12:36PM )
I like this image but there is something strange about it. I can't put my finger on exactly what I find strange - it has something to do with the uniformity of the light. If it wasn't for the fact that this gigapan has stitcher notes, I would have said you had stitched the image, then post-processed it with tone-mapping, then uploaded. (Tone-mapping gives images an interesting 'flat' quality but reduced contrast.) I notice you had your camera set to auto white balance, auto exposure, auto ISO. Normally this leads to buildings, trees etc on the horizon having a halo around them like this www.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id= 23427. How did you avoid this effect? Did you process the images before stitching or did you get lucky or are you using some technique I don't know about? Please tell! PS Please geocode.