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On the roof of the Milan Cathedral (Italian: Duomo di Milano; Milanese: Domm de Milan) is the cathedral church of Milan in Lombardy, northern Italy. It is the seat of the Archbishop of Milan, currently Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi.
See the Milan Cathedral as high resolution panorama http://share.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=12474 or another panorama from the roof: http://gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=12507 This is a spherical 360° panorama best viewed with Google Earth, there you will also find out what the shining metal is... |
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this picture contains 475 single shots and is about 95.000 px high and 54.000 px wide.
It was taken with 200mm Lens on an Canon EOS 40D |
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Kazan Cathedral in Saint Petersburg (Russia).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kazan_Cathedral,_St._Petersburg |
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Flickr picture at:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/11984823@N02/4065020409/sizes/o/ |
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St. Fidelis church, better known as the Cathedral of the Plains, is located in Victoria, Kansas. It is one of a number of large Catholic churches erected by the Volga Germans who emigrated to the area around Hays, Kansas in the late Eighteenth and early Nineteenth centuries.
Once again I've got vignetting and missed stitches because of insufficient overlap. This image was also challenging to capture because I had to incline the robot in order to capture the top of the steeple, thus the poor leveling of the left side of the image, for instance. |
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Uploaded for a second time due to display issues on the site, I may have uploaded this as the system was being reactivated.
A slightly cropped 360 degree pano of the ruins of Coventry's old Cathedral. I had hoped to be finished before the Sun appeared around the column but 390 images took a little long and just caught a blast of sunlight as the Imager circled round. Due to the issues of stitching a 360 degree pano with the GigaPan software I've removed the last two columns of images to make it a 340 degree pano. |
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Jackson Square is viewed from the podium near the Mississippi River levee. This is one of the grandest plazas in the USA, due in part to the influence of the Spanish and French colonists who took turns ruling Louisiana as a colony --- until Napoleon sold it to the USA through the efforts of Thomas Jefferson in 1803. Napoleon needed the money to finance his European campaigns and Jefferson wanted the young nation to expand into the territories secured by his Louisiana Purchase. Here, in Jackson Square, the transfer of governments was carried out amidst much pomp and fanfare. It wasn't until 1814, when General Andrew Jackson saved the city (along with local help from the pirate Jean LaFitte) from the invading British that the square was named in his honour. Later, the equestrian statue of Jackson was made to adorn the centre of the plaza. Symmetrically, on either side of the French-styled St. Louis Cathedral are the Cabildo buildings, built to house the Spanish colonial government when Spain ruled the colony. They now form part of the Louisiana Museum complex. Again, symmetrically, on the sides of the plaza are the two Pontalba apartments, which even today are luxurious apartments for the rich and famous. The alleys between the Pontalba apartments are frequented today by artists, street performers and fortune-tellers, and in the space between the Cathedral and the Square one is certain to hear the wonderful sounds of Dixieland Jazz all year round. |
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Taken while on an overnight film shoot in this beautiful cathedral. I must admit, I'm quite perturbed / disappointed that the damn beta imager appears to have screwed this picture up. I triple checked my camera and imager settings, batteries were fresh, and yet, it appears the imager couldn't stay still. Instead it looks like it continued to move in a downward motion during the images. Not cool |
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Milan Cathedral (Italian: Duomo di Milano; Milanese: Domm de Milan) is the cathedral church of Milan in Lombardy, northern Italy. It is the seat of the Archbishop of Milan, currently Cardinal Dionigi Tettamanzi.
Built from the late 14th well into the 19th century (and in a sense, never completed as work continues), the Duomo di Milano is one of the world's largest churches, being second in size within Italy only to Saint Peter's Basilica in Rome, and being the second largest Gothic cathedral in the world, after the Cathedral of Seville in Spain. The interior height of its central nave is surpassed only by the remaining choir of Beauvais Cathedral in France. Visitors are allowed to walk on the roof of The Cathedral. See the panorama I made on top of the Cathedral: http://share.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=12492 |
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This is the Senate Square which was designed by Carl Ludvig Engel in the early 19th Century. The square embodies the union of Church, State and Education with a Senate building, a University and the magnificent Lutheran Church.
The square is a popular site for gatherings of friends and for public events. This afternoon folks were standing fairly still for the passing of a military band. You might notice a few other music affectionados in town for the Iron Maiden Concert. There are tourists with their cameras, and their tour bus. It looks like quite a few local people were just hanging out and enjoying a beautiful sunny afternoon in Finland. The 28 images of this panorama were captured with a Nikon D80 and stitched with Autopano Pro. Please enjoy!! |
