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Nikon panorama maker software
Nikon panorama maker software









  1. #Nikon panorama maker software mac os#
  2. #Nikon panorama maker software manual#
  3. #Nikon panorama maker software full#

It failed on several attempts and when it finally succeeded, one of the images was shifted way higher than it should have been. The software had a lot of trouble with it.

#Nikon panorama maker software manual#

The images were great (if I do say so myself) - 24 shots taken at equal intervals using a tripod with manual exposure settings. I think the software should stitch photos in the same orientation they appear in the browser. Personally, I don’t think that step should be required. Later I realized that if I used the software to rotate the images 90° and then rotated them back, it properly recognized them for a stitch. I saved the resulting image and opened it in Photoshop, where I rotated it 90°. But then I just told it to create a vertical panorama. I couldn’t find a way around this - at least at first. This would basically attempt to stitch the top of one shot to the bottom of the next. For this particular panorama, even though the software’s browser recognized the images as vertical shots, the stitching component wanted to turn them all sideways before stitching. I ran into frustrations with the software immediately. Tell it what kind of panorama you want, and let it get to work. Just click a photo in its browser and it selects the shots that go with it. Panorama Maker takes a lot of the guesswork out of creating panoramas by automatically identifying shots taken around the same time (and likely to be part of a panorama) and handling the stitching for you.

#Nikon panorama maker software mac os#

This represents my first stitching attempt with Panorama Maker 5, a Mac OS application by ArcSoft.

#Nikon panorama maker software full#

If you’re looking for a seam, you won’t find one - not even in the full sized image. The tripod head was rotated at 15° increments. All the shots had the same exposure: f6.3 at 1/160th second. In case you’re curious, the images in this panorama were shot with a 50mm focal length (that’s a 75mm equivalent for standard 35mm film cameras, if that matters anymore). Of course, the drawback is that you need to stitch more photos together to get the final image. That’s 5 inches taller than if the photos are shot in landscape. Shoot that vertically, and your panorama becomes nearly 13 inches tall at 300 dpi. My 10 megapixel Nikon D80 shoots photos that are 2592 x 3872. Most folks don’t think of doing panoramas that way, but if you want great big finished photos, you need to maximize your pixels. It cost about twice what I wanted to spend, but I figured that between it and the tripod head it was “replacing” I’d have all the tripod heads I’d ever need.Īnyway, I was experimenting with panoramas shot with the camera held vertically, in portrait view. I wound up with another Manfrotto, which makes sense because the tripod is Manfrotto, too. That means compass points marked off for precision panning. I wanted a ball head set up with a swivel base for panoramas. I’d just bought a new tripod head for my camera.











Nikon panorama maker software