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About This GigaPan
Toggle- Taken by
-
paul g wiegman
- Explore score
- 66
- Size
- 1.31 Gigapixels
- Views
- 2983
- Date added
- June 21, 2009
- Date taken
- June 19, 2009
- Categories
- Galleries
- Competitions
- Tags
- allegheny, great, river, youghiogheny, ohiopyle, fofs, passage, waterfall
- Description
-
Ohiopyle Falls on the Youghiogheny River at Ohiopyle, PA is the largest waterfall in western Pennsylvania. At the center of Ohiopyle State Park the falls marks the beginning of the fabled "lower Yough" a favorite of kayakers. After two heavy rains, the Yough was running high and muddy.
Stitcher Notes
ToggleMinimizeGigaPan Stitcher version 0.4.3865 (Macintosh)
Panorama size: 1309 megapixels (63716 x 20551 pixels)
Input images: 189 (21 columns by 9 rows)
Field of view: 187.3 degrees wide by 60.4 degrees high (top=17.0, bottom=-43.4)
Settings:
All default settings
Original image properties:
Camera make: NIKON CORPORATION
Camera model: NIKON D300
Image size: 4288x2848 (12.2 megapixels)
Capture time: 2009-06-20 03:29:14 - 2009-06-20 03:41:57
Aperture: f/32
Exposure time: 0.1
ISO: 320
Focal length (35mm equiv.): 157.0 mm
Digital zoom: off
White balance: Automatic
Exposure mode: Manual
Horizontal overlap: 31.7 to 49.4 percent
Vertical overlap: 20.2 to 33.6 percent
Computer stats: 1792 MB RAM, 2 CPUs
Total time 2:51:12 (0:54 per picture)
Alignment: 7:20, Projection: 15:36, Blending: 2:28:16

fetching snapshots...
paul g wiegman (June 21, 2009, 02:58PM )
From the Photographer: The Camera is a Nikon D-300 with a 105 mm AF Micro-Nikkor lens. This combination works on the Gigapan Epic 100. The exposure is not the quality I planned. This experience highlighted the need to pick the day and time of day carefully. Even light, no moving clouds, is best. Mornings here in w. PA are cloudless and for a couple hours after dawn the light is warm and even. Thinly overcast days are particularly good. The 'blotchy' areas are the result of those portions being taken when sun was behind a cloud. A second photograph was made with better control of the exposure, and pausing the process when a cloud rolled by.