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About This GigaPan
Toggle- Taken by
-
Gabor Imre
- Explore score
- 100
- Size
- 0.06 Gigapixels
- Views
- 2695
- Date added
- May 17, 2008
- Date taken
- May 16, 2008
- Gear
-
Olympus C-4000 camera; DIY no-...
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- Description
-
Stereographic projection of the previous ( gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=5282 ) equirectangular image. The virtual camera does not point exactly to -90 deg pitch because the building would be more distorted due to the proximity. Instead the camera points to slightly left-upward from that direction. This reduces the distortion on the building and slightly (on the edge of noticability) increases the distortion of the "little planeth"

fetching snapshots...
Gabor Imre (January 10, 2010, 06:23AM )
Hi! You can find an other projection at gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=5282 . Do you mean that (full equiectangular) on spherical? Gabor
Keith Rodgerson (January 10, 2010, 12:16AM )
Is the spherical version viewable anywher please? Keith
Payam Rahmani (May 18, 2008, 08:29AM )
Thank you for your full explanation. I will try this effect as soon as I can, it is nice. Payam
Gabor Imre (May 18, 2008, 04:09AM )
Thanks! At first I completed the full 360 x 180 equirectangular panorama (see link in "about"). Hugin (hugin.sourceforge.net
) was used to the
manual tasks and enblend (enblend.sourceforge.net
) was used to merge the
final pano. For the next step I loaded the final
pano into Hugin, set lens parameters for the 360
deg. HFOV equirectangular image; positioned the
camera to point almost down, and used
"stereographic" projection to render
this picture.
Payam Rahmani (May 17, 2008, 06:58PM )
FANTASTIC, which software did you use to shape the pano like this?