How to shoot a 360° spherical Panorama in 90 seconds

Dodany: Sep 7, 2010

Od: 360Cities

Czas: 1:28

Jeffrey Martin from Panomonkey.com shows you how to shoot a 360° spherical Panoramic photo in a few seconds, using a digital SLR and a fisheye lens - no tripod or panoramic tripod head is necessary. After shooting, you can upload your camera photos to Panomonkey.com to create a fully spherical panorama. You can then publish this panoramic photo to 360Cities and show it on Google Earth.

Kanał: Howto

Tagi: 360  panorama  spherical  panoramic  photo  foto  photography  fotografie  panoramatic  hugin  ptgui  autopano pro  gigapan  360precision  hdr  panohead  how to  howto  tutorial  lesson  photography lessons  shooting  photograph  landscape  fisheye  peleng  sigma  fish eye  philopod  plumb bob  hand held  handheld  streetview  prague  google earth  google maps 


   Wyświetlenia: 38513    Komentarze: 17

alincostin Wypowiedź:

Oct 5, 2010 - Great video! Can you please tell me what camera was used to shoot this video ? and what lens and DOF adapter. The footage looks great!

360Cities Wypowiedź:

Oct 5, 2010 - it was a canon 5d (I - not mk2) and a nikkor 10.5 fisheye with the lens hood cut off :-) You can achieve nearly the same with a normal canon SLR (such as 500D / T1i) and a sigma 8mm.

rzaniz Wypowiedź:

Oct 13, 2010 - Hello Jeffrey. What camera did you use to record this video? I do not mean the camera used to make a spherical panorama, but you used to record this video. Thanks!

360Cities Wypowiedź:

Oct 13, 2010 - canon 5d mk2 with contax tessar 45mm (and contax-eos lens adapter)

saman1509 Wypowiedź:

Nov 8, 2010 - How did you put a Nikkor lens on a Canon Camera? Is it possible to do it otherwise? To put a Canon lens on a Nikon camera?

mwells123 Wypowiedź:

Nov 14, 2010 - wow, awesome video. thank you for sharing

Goatie84 Wypowiedź:

Nov 25, 2010 - Having a longer string and just holding it down with your foot is a bit easier than using a key or another weighted object, but great tip though :)

360Cities Wypowiedź:

Nov 26, 2010 - Yes I used to do that, before I knew better ;-) Holding the string down with your foot defeats the purpose of using a string, because then you won't hold the camera level, or above the same spot - only the same distance from your foot, which is not useful. -Jeffrey

Goatie84 Wypowiedź:

Nov 26, 2010 - Yeah, I noticed that earlier today when I was out in the garden to shoot some photos so I could try out panomonkey. Your solution is better than the one I suggested.

anykill Wypowiedź:

Nov 29, 2010 - can i use a standard 18-135mm to make spherical panoramas? i got a canon t2i and 18-135 or i need a fish eye? thank you great video

360Cities Wypowiedź:

Nov 29, 2010 - yes you can. watch the other videos for a demo of that.

360Cities Wypowiedź:

Nov 29, 2010 - @saman1509 @saman1509 google "nikon eos adapter" other way (canon lens on nikon camera) is not possible.

VIKRAMABAHU Wypowiedź:

Jan 1, 2011 - @360Cities If I buy a Canon EOS 1000D and a Samyang 8mm will i be able to shoot 360 panoramas in 4 shots? will they be of sufficient quality (for 360cities- assume ceterus paribas)? I heard if you dont have a full frame that the whole panorama shooting (and apparently stitching) gets really tricky for an amature like me, is there truth in this? and is there a way of getting arround this? Thank you for the information and the wonderful platform (360cities) you have created!

omairgeforce Wypowiedź:

Jan 12, 2011 - i just have ordinary Sony Cyber shot w210 camera 12.1 megapixel can it be done with it?

360Cities Wypowiedź:

Jan 19, 2011 - "I heard if you dont have a full frame that the whole panorama shooting (and apparently stitching) gets really tricky for an amature like me, is there truth in this? " No, this is not true. :) with e.g. a canon eos 450D and sigma 8mm, peleng 8mm, or samyang 8mm, you can make a full spherical panorama in 4-6 shots. just like in this video.

360Cities Wypowiedź:

Jan 19, 2011 - @alexkmpa this video was shot with a canon 5d mk2 and a contax 45mm tessar 2.8 lens.