The Ultimate PANORAMA Photography Guide

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  • Опубліковано 27 лип 2024
  • Today we’re going wide, to see the bigger picture as I share my ultimate guide to panorama photography.
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    #panorama #landscapephotography #spon
    Chapters
    Intro 0:00
    Best Lenses 1:18
    Composition 2:30
    How to Shoot a Pano 5:44
    On Location Example 09:06
    Squarespace 11:26
    Post Processing and Stitching 12:45
    Parallax Shift 15:23
    Printing 17:50

КОМЕНТАРІ • 175

  • @dnaeye
    @dnaeye Рік тому +8

    I came for quick tips on panos but ended watching the whole video because of the great explanations and the incredible photos. Thanks Adam!!

  • @GreasyFox
    @GreasyFox 2 роки тому +1

    Panorama is something you need to make a print out of it to be able to admire the sheer awesomeness of the world. All the efforts of doing pano makes it worth every bits.

  • @roderickwho1983
    @roderickwho1983 2 роки тому +2

    Great! The tip about the stance is gold! Thanks Adam.

  • @ianhamer4294
    @ianhamer4294 2 роки тому +1

    As usual a useful video, easy to understand, well thought out and entertaining too. Nicely done Adam.

  • @scotty4418
    @scotty4418 2 роки тому +7

    The smile of your face there Adam showing that pano print off was as wide as the image you just printed and no wonder, it was a thing of beauty. The rainbow image was superb too and loved the final edit. Likewise , I use Fotospeed paper, so will check and see if their pano paper is compatible with my Canon Pro 10s. Liked the fact you can now print from the roll from the Pro-1000

  • @RadAlzyoud
    @RadAlzyoud 2 роки тому +2

    Really beautiful panoramic photos. Well done, Adam.

  • @chrismichaeluk
    @chrismichaeluk Рік тому +2

    Absolutely brilliant video thanks. This has really helped me a lot.

  • @badgerspaw
    @badgerspaw 2 роки тому

    So very helpful, much appreciated and look forward to more like this!

  • @dirtycheesyboy
    @dirtycheesyboy 2 роки тому +1

    Such a beautiful printed image Adam. Absolute stunner! 🙌🙌🙌

  • @chrispenney5795
    @chrispenney5795 2 роки тому

    Great video! Brilliant breakdown on every stage 👍🏼

  • @kenarsenault1101
    @kenarsenault1101 2 роки тому +1

    You are a breath of authentic and unpretentious air, sir

  • @jerometerry26
    @jerometerry26 2 роки тому

    Great video and tutorial. The images look amazing!

  • @grahamegannon9708
    @grahamegannon9708 2 роки тому

    This is a great video Adam on photographing panorama scenes with some great tips form composing the photo to printing it. Excellent and thanks.

  • @jasonlacey5979
    @jasonlacey5979 2 роки тому

    Excellent work. Thank you Adam

  • @wimscheenen3535
    @wimscheenen3535 2 роки тому

    Excellent explanation of all aspects of panorama photography. Thank you for sharing.

  • @amerphoto1
    @amerphoto1 2 роки тому +3

    Adam, this video is a very good instructional video explained in a way that everyone can understand and use. Explaining from start to finish is so helpful. Thank you for your great videos!

  • @rogerdunn5988
    @rogerdunn5988 2 роки тому

    Thank you Adam. Yet another top video.

  • @robgardner6399
    @robgardner6399 2 роки тому +4

    An excellent instructional presentation Adam, from start to finish of the process. I was particularly impressed with the editing of the rainbow image, i for one would have never envisaged that result from the original image, brilliant!!

  • @iNexxFear
    @iNexxFear Рік тому

    Great advice and video, very helpful and enjoying your channel!

  • @brucedelorme5026
    @brucedelorme5026 2 роки тому +1

    Adam, fantastic VLOG! Great guidance and information. Rainbow pano is amazing

  • @leilahijazi6313
    @leilahijazi6313 Рік тому

    Thank you for these videos that inspire us in more ways than one.

  • @welshchap
    @welshchap 2 роки тому

    Very useful and informative tutorial, thank you, Adam.

  • @randyschwager84
    @randyschwager84 2 роки тому +1

    Thanks Adam! Very helpful information!

  • @AlexanderSogliero
    @AlexanderSogliero Рік тому

    Such great tips and so well spoken. Bravo 👏

  • @thehainanchannel
    @thehainanchannel 2 роки тому +1

    This video just popped up in my feed, and I’m glad it did, inspirational. Very well done!

  • @johnjacob7287
    @johnjacob7287 2 роки тому

    Superb.. thanks for sharing.. some pertinent points made. Love your sincerity ❤️🙏🏽

  • @roberthennessey5702
    @roberthennessey5702 2 роки тому

    Thank you Adam your panorama shots were awesome…your smile when you got to the end of the rainbow told it all….great captures and prints.

  • @andrewedwards3989
    @andrewedwards3989 2 роки тому

    Great video , many thanks , top stuff , regards from NZ

  • @JohnDrummondPhoto
    @JohnDrummondPhoto 2 роки тому +2

    I look forward to a couple of trips this year to places that will lend themselves to panoramas. The last pano I shot was in Arizona, several years ago.
    I recently combined three similarly-themed photos into a triptych and printed it on Inkpress Media metallic satin pano paper. It's actually 13"-wide roll paper but B&H sells packs of 25 sheets cut to 38". Trimmed, my print is 13" x 30". It's hanging in my living room now and it's gorgeous. Maybe you could talk about combining images into diptychs and triptychs, a very old-master approach to artistic story-telling. Thanks for your great content.

  • @samuelequaranta1108
    @samuelequaranta1108 2 роки тому

    Beautiful!

  • @ikelni7744
    @ikelni7744 5 місяців тому

    great video and love the rainbow shot!

  • @bobmcdonald4834
    @bobmcdonald4834 2 роки тому

    Brilliant vlog, Adam. Thank you very much 🙂 Really helpful and beautifully described.

  • @melvyndavid
    @melvyndavid Рік тому

    Thank you Adam that was a very interesting guide, it was so helpful having so mush detain in the one session.

  • @wlacalle
    @wlacalle Рік тому

    Beautiful shot !

  • @chuckm482
    @chuckm482 2 роки тому +1

    Amazing video. Thank you!

  • @davidherrington5735
    @davidherrington5735 2 роки тому

    Great instruction Adam, I loved the image. The sky reminded me of a Maxfield Parrish Painting.

  • @satyajitmukhopadya6159
    @satyajitmukhopadya6159 10 місяців тому

    Thank you so much for the video, go some good idea for shooting panorama with the use of lenses horizontally and vertically .

  • @Ruscombephotos
    @Ruscombephotos 2 роки тому +1

    Adam, your print looks amazing. I’ve admired that particular photograph since I first saw it on one of your videos. I only have a $90 printer, good for US Letter and A4 and smaller, but not panos. It does produce surprisingly good results when printing on decent paper and punches well above its weight.
    I was shocked by it. I do have a couple of panoramas I would like to print, but I would need to send them to a decent custom lab to get good results.
    But that’s also true of anything I want to get printed a decent size. But your video makes me think I would like to work on my panoramas and produce a few this year if I’m in a landscape that is conducive to a panorama. Thanks for the inspiration.

  • @thedean56
    @thedean56 2 роки тому +9

    Very nice. Two related questions: what aspect ratio is your final file, and how what are the dimensions of that print?
    Thanks for the videos.

  • @davidburchettephotography6513
    @davidburchettephotography6513 2 роки тому

    Enjoyed the video. Beautiful images! I was waiting for a discussion about the nodal point and you did eventually get to it. Was glad to see that. There are some other videos out there for those who are asking themselves “How do I find that nodal point on my lens?”.

  • @cheemy1000
    @cheemy1000 8 місяців тому

    Well explained, simple to follow, do more videos like this

  • @shuvo8146
    @shuvo8146 7 місяців тому

    Great video. Apple vision is coming and i want panaroma for every mountain i hike. I have r6 mk2 with 70-105mm. thank you for explaining everything so easily.

  • @benjaminbrosdau1626
    @benjaminbrosdau1626 Рік тому +1

    Fantastic photo and print! I do panos often and keep a short cheatsheet on hand with the nodalpoints of various lenses I use. It's actually not the nodalpoint but most people just refer to it in that way. It is definitely not the position of the physical aperture though, and the position is different for every focal length on a zoom. Zeiss will give you the nodalpoint position to the millimeter for all their lenses btw in their specs. That said, it's mostly irreleveant for distant subjects or things with soft features like water like you said.

  • @richardsmith8115
    @richardsmith8115 2 роки тому

    Loved the film Adam. I'm a massive fan of a panorama and look for every opportunity to take one. I also enjoy the process of setting up the tripod as accurately as possible. Great image of Kelly Hall Tarn (I believe) too.

  • @howardrankin7119
    @howardrankin7119 2 роки тому

    Great video and makes me want to get out and shoot more panos

  • @kevins8575
    @kevins8575 2 роки тому

    Excellent!

  • @sahejchawla9771
    @sahejchawla9771 2 роки тому

    Thank you so much for this video , i had a shoot and a night before i wasnt able to sleep because i didnt know how to click a panorama when i was told last moment i would need this.Thank you again
    Regards india 🇮🇳

  • @MSmith-Photography
    @MSmith-Photography 2 роки тому

    Thanks for tip about pointing your feet in the direction of where you want to finish a pano.
    My favourite pano that I've shot is of a dam about a 45 minute drive from where I live using an ultra wide lens. I like the perspective view that I captured.

  • @TFM3234
    @TFM3234 2 роки тому +1

    Learned a lot in this video, I will attempt to print my own as appose to sending out for prints. thanks man.

  • @pudsboi5203
    @pudsboi5203 2 роки тому

    Brilliant video 👍

  • @jayplatt8798
    @jayplatt8798 2 роки тому

    This was a great video. I use an EOS R, 70 - 200 f4, and Acratec pano gear to make extremely detailed high resolution images. I have settled on 2:4.5 and 2:6 aspect ratios. I make prints as large as 36”x108” with incredible detail.

  • @norlmerk
    @norlmerk 2 роки тому

    Nice shot!

  • @jpdj2715
    @jpdj2715 2 роки тому

    All valid and relevant. Here are some additions. We use panorama shots as a way to increase resolution compared to the single shot with a wider lens. For example the rainbow shot could have easily been taken with the 15..something zoom-lens in one shot. But at such large print formats, you run into the limitations of camera+lens sharpness (detail resolution) and limitations in the ability of your tools in post to generate many more dots than you have photosites in your sensor (a sensor does not have pixels - does not have RGB - nor does a raw file).
    As the panorama shot relies on a moderate telephoto lens, parallax shift is not a problem and Lightroom (Lr) can easily stitch this.
    I have had - handheld - panorama shots that had some mismatch in the foreground and Lr refused to do it. But Photoshop (Ps) actually was able to do it in a way that I could not see a problem.
    The video seems to say that stitching is done first and exposure correction second. I might start with exposure and tint correction. Potentially shifting white point or black point in an identical way for all member shots. Then stitch. As Ps wants images out of Camera Raw (CR) or Lr, choosing Ps means this is the way to go.
    I have tried Topaz's GigaPixel AI (TGPAI) and this does its own raw processing, irrespective of what you did in Lr (I always use sidecar files). So if you end up upsampling in TGPAI, make exposure corrections there, export the images and stitch in Ps. TGPAI can upsample to 32,000 pixels on the long side of your frame and you can pretty much generate an amount of pixels in a panorama that your printer has its dots-per-inch set (or approach that). This means you do not rely on stupid basic mathematical extrapolation when a single pixel is converted into, say, 4 or a bunch. TGPAI was able to recover detail to a surprising level. And Ps would stitch the member frames in the blink of an eye on my beast workstation (16 cores, 5.1GHz, 64GB RAM and 11GB video RAM with SSD RAID 0 arrays where I want speed and RAID 1 where I want reliability). No, my beast notebook could not do it (12 cores, 3GHz, a6GB RAM, 4GB video RAM - both W10 64bits). The notebook should be able to drive 2 displays of 4K and it can, but then Lr cannot properly process my 46MP raw files any more and it comes to a grinding halt or reboots without blue-screen - Lr generates previews based on your display's horizontal resolution and 7680 was too much.
    A nodal slide to prevent parallax shift can be cheap and easy. If you already have an L-bracket with Arca profile, you have one building block. The ballhead in the video (Manfrotto - I have that exact one) has a quick release top plate. But what we want is, to use the top plate for levelling and rotating. So, I replaced the top plate by a rotating Arca compatible mount disc (Sunwayfoto DDH-06 that is very cheap and great value and has a bubble level. Most cameras have L-R level indication but not F-B. The mounting screw with the disc fitted Manfrotto's mounting screw hole in the stud on the ball). Now a nodal rail fits the ball-head's mount plate. The rider on the nodal slide then accepts my Arca L-bracket with camera.
    How to find the nodal point is easy when you have an assistant, a tripod for the camera and a pair of sticks that remain standing (like light stands). Place one of these stands in the frame at some distance, not too far. Then look through the viewfinder and let the assistant place the other stand farther away in a position where you cannot see it because it is behind the first stand you placed in the frame. The nodal point is where rotating the camera leaves the second stand invisible in the viewfinder. I would verify if the nodal point changes when you zoom and when you change focal distance.
    If I remember my optics lessons correctly, it is possible for a lens to have a virtual nodal point, not necessarily identical with the physical entry pupil (the diaphragm's opening - the word aperture means opening).
    As panorama stitching might be your approach to have many more pixels and detail, the tripod is essential as it prevents motion blur. Dynamic range of digital cameras is so great now that what we think is luminance/chroma noise may actually be motion blur.
    Finally, your camera may have a lens database for your brand's lenses. Such a database holds all sorts of properties. A lens may have some barrel or pincushion distortion and this field curvature makes precise stitching a bit harder. It is worth being tested, when you go down this path, to see if in camera corrections to member shots align better or easier in post - Lr/CR can do this too, to certain extent, if your lens is recognized and you enable lens profile based corrections.
    So if you have a need for speed in panorama shooting, then there is one thing, not cheap, that you can throw in the kit mix: a dedicated panorama disc that you can enter your lens's focal length or angle into and then it presents you with stops for the individual member shots with proper overlap.
    Another thing is, if you have a super wide lens with you, or one that is wide enough to capture your composition in one take, then I would always start with taking that shot. And see what the result looks like after you upsampled (*) it with e.g. TGPAI.
    (*) I distinguish "upscale" from "upsample". I use upscale for naive invention of pixels, but upsample for an approach that assesses each source pixel in its wide context, so it takes gradation, shapes and edges into account. If you print large from, say, Lr, you are served with upscaling between Lr, printer driver and the printer's built-in engine. I prefer to take control.

  • @Zuzzt
    @Zuzzt 9 місяців тому

    Nice!

  • @johnhjic2
    @johnhjic2 2 роки тому +1

    Hello Adam, Nice little video about Panoramas. One thing I quit often do if I am going to take more then one panorama is to at the end of each series of images it to shoot a plank image i.e. The back of my hand. The alter my setting or recompose the next seen. Then when I am processing all the images it is simple to separate each panorama. Fotospeed do an amazing selection of. roll paper to. Keep well, keep safe and stay happy.

  • @ByronRC
    @ByronRC 2 роки тому +1

    Great video 😀

  • @behramcooper3691
    @behramcooper3691 2 роки тому

    Precise clear-cut instructions. Thank you. You did say we need to use manual settings. But do we set the exposure for the brightest frame, the darkest frame, or somewhere in between? Some insight into that will be helpful. If you did and I missed it, my apologies.

  • @gregmolchan1202
    @gregmolchan1202 2 роки тому +1

    Thanks, Adam! Great tutorial. Don't think I can share an image here, but I went out and composed a few panoramas today after watching your vid.

  • @CourtneyVictoria
    @CourtneyVictoria 2 роки тому +1

    Excellent instruction. I don't do panos often and attempted one a couple of days ago that didn't go so well. Though it did motivate me to work on that skill and get that shot next time. This video is brilliant timing and very useful. 👍

  • @shengyuanhsuphotography7255

    nice video indeed

  • @RM831BC4E4
    @RM831BC4E4 2 роки тому +1

    Awesome Vlog Adam.

    • @Firstmanphotography
      @Firstmanphotography  2 роки тому +1

      Thanks Richie. Appreciate it.

    • @RM831BC4E4
      @RM831BC4E4 2 роки тому

      @@Firstmanphotography Welcome, that Pano as beautiful!

  • @thomaseriksson6256
    @thomaseriksson6256 Рік тому

    Thank you, I will start to take panorama in woodland so Your Video is a good information source. I will get the Nodal slide a Levering plate and a panorama head. I will use a Zeiss 50mmF2.0 Macro or a Nikon 45mmF2.8 PC. For open landscape I will get an AFS70-200mm E VR to my D700/D800E I have an 85mm F2.8 PC lens that I will try to use but it may be too short. I also have a 24mmF3.5 PC but I'm not sure if a wide angle is a good choice for panorama due to distortion.

  • @robertleem5643
    @robertleem5643 2 роки тому

    That photo at the end looks absolutely amazing, I've been using the Tamron 18-300mm lens for a lot of my panoramics, don't know whether to buy a second hand Canon 70-200mm lens, they are not cheap

  • @RaySweeting
    @RaySweeting 2 роки тому

    Great video thank you. Is there a guide for the degrees to pan the camera based on lens focal length?

  • @SLIGODAN
    @SLIGODAN 6 місяців тому

    You omitted the step I really needed which is how to scale the image in L.R or P.S to get the printer to print the pano from the roll.

    • @danelmore5899
      @danelmore5899 4 місяці тому

      Just set the aspect ratio in the crop tool. Then resize the image and keep the relative aspect ratio, it comes out perfectly the size you need for print.

  • @stefanbalmus1659
    @stefanbalmus1659 2 роки тому

    This was actually very inspiring! I'll have a whack at panoramas myself the next time I get a chance :D I wonder how much of the near foreground can you actually shoot so that the change in perspective doesn't make it unstitchable. Anyway, great work with these videos !

  • @rooneymar1178
    @rooneymar1178 6 місяців тому

    The rainbow one was so nice!!! It's funny you still got time to take a short video to record how you did it.

  • @brushbros
    @brushbros Рік тому

    Over saturation and detracts from a photo in the same way that gilding detracts from the beauty of a lily. It is too much make-up on an already beautiful woman. But I have learned a lot from your video. Thank you.

  • @kevindickinson1541
    @kevindickinson1541 2 роки тому

    Hi Adam. You talked about which Ball Head was unsuitable but what is the Head you are using and is it on a separate leveling base? And secondly you were talking about fixing your Focus and using Manual. What do you do about your White Balance settings.

  • @chauinternational
    @chauinternational Рік тому

    I love taking pictures but I never get to see them afterwards. But at my work I have a two monitors and panoramic pictures are great to use on them since it allows me to get the wide view. I have many panoramas by now and have them on a slide show on my desktop. It's also a great way to start a meeting when I'm presenting because most of the time my colleagues focuses on the pictures and we casually start the meeting. So my point is panoramas are great on monitors of you have more than one monitor or a wide monitor.

  • @craigbrockway652
    @craigbrockway652 2 роки тому +1

    Thanks heaps Adam! Excellent video. A question I do have is of aspect ratio settings within our cameras, many of us are using full frame at a natural 3:2 ratio. Should we change to a different ration for shooting panaramas?

  • @rosssayer6524
    @rosssayer6524 2 роки тому +1

    Really great result Adam, appreciate your process in doing Pano's. I thought it was quite funny when you said that when doing a panorama shot go from left to right, then when you did the rainbow you went from right to left......Not that it mattered as you still achieved the result.

  • @DIOS10
    @DIOS10 2 роки тому +1

    Ok, fair play, great photo at the very end. But as a hobby photographer where does one need to focus on whilst moving the camera ? That’s the kind of points we need as help.

  • @howardholtzman1331
    @howardholtzman1331 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you for a great video. One quick question. Where did you focus?

    • @Firstmanphotography
      @Firstmanphotography  2 роки тому

      On the far bank of the water. I do not treat the focus with a pano any differently to if it were a single frame.

  • @bobcoggin4618
    @bobcoggin4618 2 роки тому

    Brill 👍🏻

  • @AamerAli
    @AamerAli Рік тому

    Hi
    thanks for the video.. I am using lightroom CC.
    my question is, what is the sequence of taking multiple photos for merging? where I have a horizontal building scene with sky and sea, does it matter where to start?

    should i start
    1- from sky to sea or
    2- from sea to sky or
    3- from left to right then sky then sea?
    Thanks

  • @allandavies1187
    @allandavies1187 2 роки тому +1

    Hello Adam, yes! I am still enjoying your book which I love. Question: Would I be correct in saying that there is no timer delay when taking your image? And secondly, why are so many vloggers not using a cable release?

    • @Firstmanphotography
      @Firstmanphotography  2 роки тому

      Yeah there’s no timer when doing it handheld. on the tripod I always use the 2 second timer, which is also why I don’t use a shutter release anymore.

  • @irajnaghash
    @irajnaghash Рік тому +2

    How you do panorama is tough for a beginner, just good with a very experienced photographer. If the landscape is an ocean, it's hard to hold a level of water in one line.

  • @rogerwalton8160
    @rogerwalton8160 2 роки тому +1

    Great video Adam. Just a couple of points: removing the curl from roll paper is quite tricky. I weight mine with hefty books but am tempted by Fotospeed’s decurling device but it’s not cheap! Once I’ve got the panorama printed framing can prove pretty expensive too so I usually leave it but it then looks unfinished!

    • @Firstmanphotography
      @Firstmanphotography  2 роки тому

      Yeah, framing any big print is a premium option. I think big prints just look great mounted on board.

    • @Firstmanphotography
      @Firstmanphotography  2 роки тому +2

      There’s also some decent videos about making your own decurling device. Calling it a device is a push.

  • @mahmoudshoots
    @mahmoudshoots 2 роки тому +1

    What a great video!!! Very informative and easy to understand.. I would like to get some help in more details of how to do this pano on Canon Pro1000 as it’s bit intimidating for first time pano printing specially never used a roll before in such printer

    • @Firstmanphotography
      @Firstmanphotography  2 роки тому +1

      Indeed, I wasted a fair bit of paper and ink figuring it out. Basically you have to create a custom print size. I think the max, if memory serves, is 2x the length of A2 and obviously the same width. it doesn’t print borderless though.

    • @mahmoudshoots
      @mahmoudshoots 2 роки тому

      @@Firstmanphotography very useful indeed!! Really appreciate your prompt response and the usual support!! Great efforts 👍🏼👍🏼

  • @martinstajer1826
    @martinstajer1826 10 місяців тому

    Great video, thank you!! I was lazy a few times and just got a handheld pano using autofocus and never had a problem with the sharpness or details, maybe lightroom has some "focus-stacking" ability or I just focused on the same focal point, I don´t know...
    I would be curious how to do a focus stacking AND a panorama, for example when you want to do multiple layers of a pano, not just one line and what happens, when you focus on your foreground in one line and your background in the second line and merge them in LR, any experience? Thnak you!!

  • @Redserpent2000
    @Redserpent2000 2 роки тому +2

    Beautiful prints Adam. Would I be right in thinking that last print was a 17"x44 ish"?

  • @martinwebb3394
    @martinwebb3394 10 місяців тому

    Great informative video Adam. This is something I would like to have a go at. Would you say you have a "go to" aspect cropping ratio for the majority of your prints - I'm also thinking about this in regards to getting prints done - as I don't have photo printer will certain sizes/aspect ratios be better/easier for printing. Thanks Martin

    • @danelmore5899
      @danelmore5899 4 місяці тому

      The capabilities of the printer that's used dictates what aspect ratios you may choose from. Capture the images and stitch them to the largest possible resolution, then based on your printer you make cropped images from this master file. Any time you print to a new printer, you'll likely create a new version of your image to take advantage of the possible resolution and aspect ratios for the printer.

  • @MGMBPhotography
    @MGMBPhotography 2 роки тому

    great video - what were the print settings please - DPI and dimensions etc ??

  • @karlnotyourbusiness4429
    @karlnotyourbusiness4429 2 роки тому

    Fantastic video. Off to Lanzarote in May and will try this method. BTW, do you know if it works the same for say a receding line of hills rather than one that is 'face on'? Thanks again.

    • @karlnotyourbusiness4429
      @karlnotyourbusiness4429 2 роки тому

      Did get to Lanza but the number of places for a decent pano more limited than expected. Found a spot near Geria that worked. Tried it with my 9mm super wide first as a baseline.
      Then used my 70-200MKII handheld. Wanted to use tripod but it was very windy and the tripod quite light - good chance it would tip over.
      Not a fan of LR or PS so processed in Affinity Photo and the results have been excellent. Sturdy tripod would have been even better. Way beyond anything I could achieve with a wide lens.
      One question: Could it have been improved even further by bracketing and doing a series of HDR merges before stitching?
      Might try that next time I get chance. Even dull weather shots look better bracketed using HDR Merge in Affinity.

  • @nh-ss5pw
    @nh-ss5pw 2 роки тому +2

    Thumbs up 👍

  • @user-xz5bv8ir7j
    @user-xz5bv8ir7j Рік тому

    Waaw your print looks huge. I once shot a pano but the strip band was tin any idea ?

  • @JasonTako
    @JasonTako Місяць тому

    Thank you for the great tutorial! I'm going to be photographing Native American models in a tipi to use as reference for fine art painting. I assume I'll be very close to them when I photograph them, probably 5 feet away give or take. They will most likely be sitting or kneeling next to each other, about 3-4 persons in all. Seems like panos would be a great way to avoid wide-angle distortion but I'm not sure what type of lens I should rent. And it looks like I need to watch out for parallax shift. I will be shooting a Canon 5D Mark IV. Any lens recommendations or general recommendations for close-up panos? Thanks!!!

  • @danielvoulkos8274
    @danielvoulkos8274 2 роки тому

    Thank you Adam for the video. I have a question for you. I had been doing some pano's in LR for awhile this past month to check it out.....however, I did send the images over to PS a few times and to me PS does a way better job of stitching, finding the edges. Have you seen that yourself? I really do. Some are 5 images and a few are 15 to 33. They come out really great. Neither programs like doing large sunset sky images with far off mountains. Have you had issues with that yourself? Clouds match up perfectly, so I don't quite know what to make of it. Thanks from Montana.

  • @danelmore5899
    @danelmore5899 4 місяці тому

    There's a lot of info missing here but for the casual photographer this might help. If you really want to master panos, search for videos that discuss paralax, nodal point and pano heads/leveling bases. The biggest problem with his technique is his assumption that a level head with no leveling base is going to work well. To see an exagerated example, extend two of your tripod legs fully, the third one be 8 inches less extended as the other two. You can still level the head but see what hapoens when you rotate to take you pano shots.

    • @Firstmanphotography
      @Firstmanphotography  4 місяці тому

      Here you go - ua-cam.com/video/UMrpXRYMv0A/v-deo.html

    • @danelmore5899
      @danelmore5899 4 місяці тому

      @@Firstmanphotography I saw that video and you do mention paralax and show a nice diagram but you're still missing the point. Without a panning head, you have to adjust the legs of your tripod to get a perfectly level base at the top of the tripod for the head to rotate above this perfectly flat base. It's a fine way to operate, just takes longer to adjust each of the legs to get this flat surface at the level base just below the head of your tripod. You don't mention this in your videos and just make the plate level and then rotate, that will make an uneven sweep across your scene as you pan if the base below the head is not even. That will work in some cases but you really want an even sweep as you pan so that you don't "dip" and "rise" in the scene, that requires removing pixels in post to crop the image area.

  • @chriskeentechnician
    @chriskeentechnician 17 днів тому

    I’ve discovered that my big lens is producing a slight vignetting which appears as vertical lines of slight dimming in the pano. I’ve got a couple of ideas on things to try, but any recommendations? (other than buying a new lens 😛) Thanks for all the tips in the vid 🙏

  • @jezgowers-cromie4133
    @jezgowers-cromie4133 2 роки тому

    Thanks Adam, great video. Any tips on where to get pano's printed if you don't have your own printer?

    • @Firstmanphotography
      @Firstmanphotography  2 роки тому +1

      If you’re based in the UK I use the print space. Fujifilm have good services too. Whitewall are a cheaper option.

  • @SinaFarhat
    @SinaFarhat 2 роки тому +1

    Nice! :)

  • @juanvenegas278
    @juanvenegas278 2 місяці тому

    Hi Adam,
    Thanks for the video ! I learned a lot.
    Let me ask you a question. Do you know the cause when Lightroom tells you, that some of the photos were not possible to be merged ?
    Thanks,
    Juan

  • @edfrank00
    @edfrank00 2 роки тому

    Pointing your feet at where you want to end up is how you do a hand held pan in video as well. In video you start before the section you want and end past where you want to stop to eliminate the shake when starting and ending the image. That probably doesn't apply to stills.

  • @brianbrooking496
    @brianbrooking496 2 роки тому +1

    Beautiful shot.... how do you figure out what print size to use?

    • @Firstmanphotography
      @Firstmanphotography  2 роки тому +1

      Trial and error. I had to set a custom size in the end which I have now saved as a preset.

  • @chrisb4488
    @chrisb4488 22 дні тому

    Do you shoot a panorama in 4:3 or 16:9 aspect ration in the camera or is up to the end user?

  • @badgerspaw
    @badgerspaw 2 роки тому

    Ps superb print!

  • @petersandyford5901
    @petersandyford5901 2 роки тому

    Adam, I own the same printer but had not realised that one can now print wide landscapes from the printer. I am assuming that you just have cut the required length of paper from a roll or as you said you can but panoramic paper. Would you mind confirming that is what you do? Many thanks

  • @firnameweren5311
    @firnameweren5311 2 роки тому

    Can you please let me know which canon printer you use? Thanks.