Handmade Panoramas; Manually Stitching Can Be Fun!
Rick Sammon, May, 2004

| |
1
Photos © 2003, Rick Sammon, All Rights Reserved
|
|
In 1980, I was involved in
a project to create the world’s largest photograph: a panorama
of the Grand Canyon. Our team of six (photographers and a TV crew) rode
mules into the Grand Canyon, where, in the sweltering August heat, we
set up a 35mm SLR camera loaded with slide film. The camera, equipped
with a 85mm lens, was carefully secured on a surveyor’s level
that was, in turn, mounted on a tripod.
We had a computer print-out of the degree and minute settings (indicated
on the level) that were needed so that each frame precisely overlapped
the adjoining frame by about 20 percent. The result was a picture perfect
panorama: The 25 35mm frames were each enlarged to 6x9 feet and then
mounted as a mural in a 125-foot circle. Standing inside the mural,
one felt as though he or she were really standing at the bottom of the
Grand Canyon. The mural is now on display at the International Photography
Hall of Fame & Museum (www.iphf.org)
in Oklahoma City.
|
|
This past August, again in
the sweltering heat, I rode a mule into the Grand Canyon, this time with
my wife, son, and digital camera kit: a Canon EOS Rebel and a Canon EF-S
18-55mm zoom lens. One of my photography goals was to take a panorama,
although not on the scale of the 1980 project. This time I intended to
produce a panorama solo—something anyone can do these days in the
digital darkroom. You’ll need a panorama program and/or an image-editing
program with layers and canvas size control, such as Photoshop Elements
or Photoshop CS (the program I use).
Here’s a look at what I did, in the field and at home. As you’ll
see, I was most pleased with the panorama achieved with a manual stitching
technique—because it gave me totally creative control. In reading
this article and in seeing the pictures, think about how you can apply
the same techniques to your own panoramas.
|
|
(#1) Here are my three original
digital images, which I shot specifically for the panorama. Each image
overlapped the other by about 30 percent. I set my camera to the raw mode
for maximum image quality. Overlapping pictures to be used in a panorama
is very important. So is keeping the camera level.
(#2) Using ArcSoft’s Panorama Maker, I quickly and easily created
this panorama on my Power Mac G4. I actually like the way the horizon
line is curved.
(#3) Some panorama programs, especially early versions, produced panoramas
that, in certain lighting conditions, clearly showed where the images
were stitched together, making the panorama unacceptable.
|
|
(#4) Manually stitching images
together in Photoshop or other photo editing imaging programs with layers
and a canvas size option is easy. First, open the picture you want on
the left side of your panorama. Then, triple the canvas size to the right
of your image. This screen shot shows one photo and the canvas dialog
box in Photoshop.
|
|
(#5) Next, open the other images.
Then, using the Move tool, drag your other two images into position on
the newly expanded image. For easy alignment, slightly reduce the opacity
of your pictures so you can see through them.
(#6) Here’s the key: Using the Burn, Dodge and Eraser tools, blend
the images together. For this panorama, the burning, dodging, and erasing
process took less than five minutes.
|
|
Now it’s your turn to
have fun expanding your photographic horizons by creating panoramas.
Rick Sammon recently completed
“Photoshop for Outdoor and Travel Photographers,” an interactive,
tutorial CD produced by Software Cinema. For information, see www.ricksammon.com
and www.software-cinema.com
|
|