Sunday, May 24, 2009

More photos in one

I decided to use this challenge to learn to do something that I have wanted to do for a long time: panoramas. This is two photos stiched together with Arcsoft Panorama software. It was so easy to do, I can't believe I didn't try it sooner!


22 mm, F 16, 1/60 sec, ISO 200

For choose your challenge, I did a challenge that I missed earlier: vintage. This is my friend's antique dresser that has been repainted red. I love the colors and the drawer pulls. I can't decide if this photo would be better with more of the pulls in focus or not.

50 mm, F 4.8, 1/50 sec, ISO 200

CC please.

9 comments:

George and Teri said...

Beautiful pictures, I love both of them very much. I have never tried the photo stitching, I have the program but have never experimented with it, so you have inspired me to try.

Mindy said...

Ooooh, pretty! I have yet to try stitching a panoramic... you are one brave woman! I'll have to try it sometime. Gulp. ;)

Janelle said...

The panoramic piecing together is a great take on the challenge!

Breezi@ Not Your Average Fairytale said...

Wow! Awesome job Jen!! Love the panoramic! The clouds rolling over that hilltop are just sweet!

What a great view!

Erin Wageman said...

beautiful! the clouds in the first picture are amazing! You did an awesome job at putting them together! I'm going to have to try it! I also really like your vintage shot! you took it from a great angle!

Candace said...

Great job on both those photos! Stitching for the panoramic... you did amazing!! I've never tried that!

Katy said...

WOW!!!! BOTH pictures are amazing, I'm LOVING the panoramic shot-- is that stitching program expensive? It looks difficult! I LOVE the vintage too, great angle and lighting... and what an awesome dresser!

Shelby said...

Spectacular view!

Jen said...

The stitching program came free with my camera bundle. It is a Nikon program. I understand, though, that you can do the same thing in photoshop.

It was super easy too. I just made sure to take the pictures with the same settings at the same level and to overlap the images by about 1/3. Then I uploaded them to the program, selected them, and hit a button to process them. The computer did most of the work. I just had to crop off the curved edges. Super easy!

I'm not sure what the process is in photoshop, though.