Panoramas

I recently decided to try my hand at generating "Panoramas" and I have to admit that the results are very interesting.  At this time I only have one group of photographs that were taken specifically for the purpose of generating a panorama while the others just happened to work.  The visual impact of a "Stitched" panorama consisting of a number of photographs is far more interesting than a group of side-by-side photographs.  I'll add a few more as I get them.

Note:  These images are very wide.  When displaying wide images many browsers will fit the width to the screen width.  When they do this they normally have the ability to click the image to see zoom in and see the width.  They will usually show a magnifying glass cursor when it is over the image, and if you just click the photo it will zoom in. entire


Panorama #1  -- 7088 x 496 pixels, 1.16 megabytes
Panoramic view of Radnor Lake in Nashville, TN.  This image consists of 26 photographs comprising a 180° view of the west side of the lake.


Panorama #2  -- 4765 x 1774 pixels, 1.35 megabytes
This panorama consists of 4 photographs taken on Highway 84 south of El Monte Rojo, NM in October, 2009.  I took the photographs on a motorcycle trip through the area and at the time had not thought of combining them into a panorama.  They just coincidently fit together very well.


Panorama #3  -- 4308 x 1476 pixels, 1.45 megabytes
This panorama consists of 3 photographs taken at Cedar Breaks National Monument near Cedar City, UT in October, 2009.  The site where the photos were taken is at 10,378' above sea level and looking downward through a draw in the mountains.  As with the panorama above they just coincidently fit together since I had not planned on using them in a panorama when I took them.


Panorama #4  -- 1859 x 1024 pixels, 645 kilobytes
This panorama consists of 2 photographs taken from the south rim of the Grand Canyon (Arizona) in October, 2009.  This is another panorama where the images just coincidently fit together since I had not planned on using them in a panorama when I took them.


Panorama #5  -- 1859 x 1024 pixels, 645 kilobytes
This is another Radnor Lake panorama.  Similar location to the first one but more detail.


Panorama #6  -- 1859 x 1024 pixels, 645 kilobytes
This is another Radnor Lake panorama.  Similar location to the first one but more detail.


Panorama #7  -- 27,952 x 768 pixels, 7.1 MEGAbytes
This is a very large and long panorama taken around the lake at Centennial Park in Nashville, TN.  Notice that it is 27 THOUSAND pixels long and right at 7 megabytes in size.  The image covers about 235° around the lake and consists of 47 images spaced at 5° apart.

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