Taking Panoramic Landscapes - The Easy
Solution
By: Gary Nugent

I love panoramas. There's something very
appealing about their shape. It's probably because
we see the world more in these dimensions than the
near square format of standard film/sensor frames.
It might also explain the upsurge in the popularity
of widescreen TVs!
Panoramas have a reputation of
being hard to take. There are dedicated panorama
cameras available but unless you've got at least a
thousand dollars to spare, you probably can't afford
one! But you can take panoramas with any kind of
camera.
All a panorama is, is a
sequence of images where you turn slightly for each
different frame. In the old days, before PCs and the
likes of Photoshop were around, you'd take your
prints (there wasn't much point in shooting
panoramas on slide film, for obvious reasons), lay
them out on a table and position them over each
other where they overlapped. A bit of sticky tape
held them together. [As a side note, this technique
was used by NASA to build up mosaic pictures of the
planets and satellites their spaceprobes visited, up
till the late '70s/early 80s when computers were
introduced to make the process less laborious].
Now that PCs and image
manipulation packages are easy to come by,
high-quality panoramas can now be created by anyone.
If you're shooting slide or negative film, you will
need to have your images scanned before you do
anything else.
DIY Panoramas
The idea behind taking
panoramas with SLR cameras is that the camera is
rotated around its nodal point during each
successive exposure. What's the Nodal Point? It's
the point inside your camera where the light rays
converge and flip over. It's different for different
focal lengths (on zoom lenses) and for different
prime lenses (fixed focal length lenses like a
standard 50mm lens). It's important to rotate about
this point to eliminate image mismatches due to
changes in parallax. Parallax is the apparent shift
of an object against a background due to a change in
observer position.
Just to be clear, the Nodal
Point is not the same as the film/sensor plane.
Generally, for most SLR cameras and lenses, the
Nodal Point is located somewhere towards the center
of the lens barrel and lies in front of the
image/sensor plane.
The Problem With Parallax
Parallax is easily demonstrated
by a simple experiment. Hold up your finger about 1
foot in front of your face and alternately open and
close your left and right eyes. You'll notice that
your finger shifts left and right with respect to
the background depending on which eye is open. Try
another experiment: With your finger still raised,
close one eye and turn your head from side to side.
Notice how your finger moves with respect to the
background. This relative movement is due to the
fact that you're not rotating your head around your
eye's nodal point, which is somewhere in the center
of your eyeball. Instead, you're rotating about your
spine which is several inches to the rear and off to
one side. It is this relative side-to-side motion
that we try to eliminate when setting up a camera
for panoramas. [If you want to read up more about
parallax,
Wikipedia have a good explanatory article.]
Now, if you consider a camera
held up to your face - it will suffer even greater
parallax errors as it's farther from your spine (the
point of rotation of your head) than your eye. It's
surprisingly common for people to take panoramas in
this fashion and then find the individual pictures
don't match up.
So use a tripod and rotate the
camera on the tripod. The parallax errors will be
significantly smaller but there will still be some
error involved. However, the images will match up
better than with the head rotation method.
Mechanical Contraptions
What perfectionists strive for
is to have the camera rotate about the nodal point.
There are brackets and contraptions available that
will let you offset your camera from the tripod's
axis of rotation and with a little experimentation
and trial and error, you can position your camera so
that its nodal point is directly over the axis of
rotation of the bracket. Getting this spot-on means
your images should line up perfectly.
A few months ago I bought such
a bracket - the Kaidan Kiwi. This comes in two
halves which produce an L-shaped bracket. Its
instruction manual explains how to set it up and
find the nodal point for your camera and lens.
However, you have to get your tripod perfectly level
before using it, otherwise you end up with a curved
panorama rather than a straight one.
I've had good success using
this bracket, but it is large and heavy and
certainly a bit too cumbersome to be carrying on
long walks or while away on vacation.
AutoStitch To The Rescue
Then I recently came across a
free bit of software called AutoStitch. Written by a
couple of students at the University of Columbia,
this takes all of the heartache out of creating
panoramas. All you do is select the size of the
final image and tell it what images you want it to
stitch. It then goes off and produces your panorama.
It really is that simple.
Unless successive images are radically different in
exposure (i.e. one image to too light or dark
compared to another), it seamlessly blends them. It
performs all the warping of the images necessary to
get them to align (other software I've used can
cause ghosting in the overlap areas where it hasn't
quite aligned the images). It also aligns multiple
rows of images rather than just a single strip.
Even better, it doesn't require
you to set up your camera to rotate about its nodal
point. When I was in Crete last year, I tried
shooting a few panoramas with my Canon EOS 300D held
up to my eye (I didn't have a tripod with me). When
I got home, I tried stitching the pictures together
using various bits of software (including software
dedicated to stitching images together) and didn't
get satisfactory results. I knew, though, that it
was because I'd swivelled the camera about my spine.
But I tried these images with AutoStitch and they
came out perfectly.
See for yourself here.
I went walking up the Wicklow
mountains in Ireland no too long ago and up to a
high point called Djouce which offers a view over
the rolling hills south of Dublin. As an experiment,
I shot 8 frames while rotating my head about the
scene (camera to eye as per normal). I wanted to see
if the Crete photos were a fluke as the panoramas
from there were composed of, at most, 3 frames each
(sometimes 2).
Conclusion
What can I say? I plugged 8
frames into AutoStitch and after a bit of time
processing the images, it produced a perfect
panorama with no ghosting I could see in the overlap
reasons. I like software like that. It may only do
one thing but it does that one thing very well.
Give AutoStitch a try. It's free and, so far, it
produces the best panoramic results of all the
panorama/stitching software I've tried.
One thing to remember when
taking panoramas is that the exposures of each frame
should be the same. So if you make your first
exposure at f/8 and 1/125 of a second, take them all
using those settings. Yes, you will have to put your
camera into manual mode. Otherwise, you run the risk
of having radically different exposures for your
images. For example, if you're panning over a
landscape that contains water, like a lake, any
sunlight reflected off the water may make your
camera take a shorter exposure than for the other
frames in your sequence. Setting your camera to
manual mode will prevent that.
About the Author
Gary Nugent is a software engineer by profession and
has been in the business for over 20 years.
Photography has been a hobby for an even longer
period of time and he's now even more passionate
about it since making the switch to using a digital
SLR camera. You'll find more tips and techniques at
Great Landscape Photography:
http://www.great-landscape-photography.com
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