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About This GigaPan
Toggle- Taken by
-
John Toeppen
- Explore score
- 36
- Size
- 0.13 Gigapixels
- Views
- 4675
- Date added
- September 17, 2008
- Date taken
- September 16, 2008
- Categories
- Galleries
- Virtual California, Old California, Old Towns
- Competitions
- Tags
- view, crossed, 3d, bodie, image, ghost, right, town
- Description
-
Bodie is a well preserved ghost town that is now a state park. Read more about it here:
www.bodie.com
/
This panorama is 1/2 of a 3D photo. The other photo is here:
www.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=9201
The only way that I can offer to view these images is to open each one in its own GigaPan browser window. One can view using the crossed view method described here:home.comcast.net/~holographics/cross.html
Some of us have mirror arragements that are used to make maps or dedicated to this sort of purpose (usually not panoramas). These use parallel viewing. The difference is that crossed images have the right image on the left and parrallel is the opposite way.It will take some effort to lineup the right an left images and make the scale the same in both. But it does provide a 3D 360 panoramic view. Now if we could only control both instances with one mouse!
Have fun!
Stitcher Notes
ToggleMinimizeGigaPan Stitcher version 0.4.2735 (Windows)
Panorama size: 127 megapixels (51808 x 2455 pixels)
Input images: 25 (25 columns by 1 rows)
Field of view: 360.0 degrees wide by 17.1 degrees high (top=9.2, bottom=-7.8)
Settings:
All default settings
Original image properties:
Camera make: Canon
Camera model: Canon PowerShot A570 IS
Image size: 3072x2304 (7.1 megapixels)
Aperture: f/4.5 - f/8
Exposure time: 0.001 - 0.002
ISO: 200
Focal length (35mm equiv.): 96.9 mm
Digital zoom: off
White balance: Automatic
Exposure mode: Manual
Has subsecond timestamp: no
Horizontal overlap: 8.6 to 88.6 percent
Computer stats: 2045.21 MB RAM, 2 CPUs
Total time 35:57 (1:26 per picture)
Alignment: 2:33, Projection: 3:53, Blending: 29:31

fetching snapshots...
Ron Schott (September 18, 2008, 04:51AM )
Hi John, Have you considered making a red/blue anaglyph image out of these? For example, see my anaglyph of the Saline River Valley, Kansas: www.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id= 3527If you Google 'photoshop anaglyphs' you'll find a number of useful tutorials that will step you through the process. Then all you need is a pair of anaglyph glasses (check old National Geographics).