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About This GigaPan
Toggle- Taken by
-
John Toeppen
- Explore score
- 34
- Size
- 1.36 Gigapixels
- Views
- 1722
- Date added
- October 15, 2009
- Date taken
- October 10, 2009
- Categories
- Galleries
- Autumn Colors, Virtual California, Jax Prints
- Competitions
- Tags
- Description
-
This view only shows Conway Grove and is one half of a hyper stereo pair. Hyperstereo is where the views are considerably further apart than one's eyes. This view was taken about thirty feet to the left of the right view. The goal is to capture perspective differences that can not be seen using normal eye spacing - in this case a 150x exageration f depth. When cross viewed these trees look like something in a model railway set. Since the views weree not taken at the same moment the clouds drifted considerably between the two shots, and so did the shadows of the clouds.
Open this image in full scree to cross view in 3D use this image as the other side:
gigapan.org/gigapans/fullscreen/34819/
This is how to cross view:
home.comcast.net/~holographics/cross.html
Stitcher Notes
ToggleMinimizeGigaPan Stitcher version 0.4.3864 (Windows)
Panorama size: 1363 megapixels (67690 x 20150 pixels)
Input images: 207 (23 columns by 9 rows)
Field of view: 71.0 degrees wide by 21.1 degrees high (top=9.1, bottom=-12.0)
Settings:
All default settings
Original image properties:
Camera make: Canon
Camera model: Canon PowerShot SX110 IS
Image size: 3456x2592 (9.0 megapixels)
Capture time: 2009-10-10 14:07:49 - 2009-10-10 14:22:36
Aperture: f/7.1
Exposure time: 0.005
ISO: 80
Focal length (35mm equiv.): 603.5 mm
Digital zoom: 1.7X
White balance: Fixed
Exposure mode: Manual
Horizontal overlap: 2.2 to 24.7 percent
Vertical overlap: 11.0 to 22.7 percent
Computer stats: 2045.21 MB RAM, 2 CPUs
Total time 26:11:03 (7:35 per picture)
Alignment: 2:13:22, Projection: 41:24, Blending: 23:16:16

fetching snapshots...
Jason Buchheim (January 10, 2010, 04:04PM )
Very amazing 3-D Gigapixel image! I don't know how I was able to figure the linkage between these two very different sized Gigapans, but I did (for the most part, it does drift some in the y-axis due to curvature of one of the images) - it is viewable in 3-D full-color 'cross-eye' viewer here: www.3dpan.org/34816-34819--6.3-1.5 -50-91
and
many more 3-D Gigapixel Images can be viewed here:
www.3dpan.org