Thank you Illah, well first of all - you have to
get a Fa-18 Hornet and a crazy pilot ;-) the rest
of it is relatively easy. - Canon EOS 1d/4, - ISO
400, - t 1/1250, - f 6.3, - about 10 fps, - lens
135mm, - handheld, and then (and that's the
hardest part) just keep pressing the shutter.
(i'm so used to shoot in bursts of 4 to 6
frames that it really takes (more) practice to
keep the shutter pressed). i stitched the pano
with autopano giga, kept the layers and re-pasted
the layer where the stitcher cut off a part of the
jet. the stitching is very easy because i had at
least 50% overlap with a relatively long lens and
no near objects that could give you parallax
headaches. (and the bird just happened to try to
fill the gap where i missed three shots;-)) best
Dieter
hophi (October 15, 2010, 02:19PM )
Thank you Illah, well first of all - you have to get a Fa-18 Hornet and a crazy pilot ;-) the rest of it is relatively easy. - Canon EOS 1d/4, - ISO 400, - t 1/1250, - f 6.3, - about 10 fps, - lens 135mm, - handheld, and then (and that's the hardest part) just keep pressing the shutter. (i'm so used to shoot in bursts of 4 to 6 frames that it really takes (more) practice to keep the shutter pressed). i stitched the pano with autopano giga, kept the layers and re-pasted the layer where the stitcher cut off a part of the jet. the stitching is very easy because i had at least 50% overlap with a relatively long lens and no near objects that could give you parallax headaches. (and the bird just happened to try to fill the gap where i missed three shots;-)) best Dieter
Illah Nourbakhsh (October 15, 2010, 08:23AM )
Okay. This is too cool! Tell us about how you did this! best illah