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A Picture Perfect Day |
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View from fortress Ehrenberg at Reutte on a bright sunny day in April 2009.
129 21MP RAW shots taken with an EOS 5D Mark II and a Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS USM lens mounted on a really crappy tripod @400mm, f/8, 1/500@100ISO, and fixed WB. RAW workflow was done with Canon DPP, stitching with Hugin 0.7.0 and nearly no postprocessing necessary. |
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A popular destination. After repeatedly pausing, backing up and starting again attempting to miss the crowd I finally gave up and finished the pan. Then, as is the nature of chance, the crowd disappeared. I retook the center portion of the image, and then worked through modifying the image numbers to get the redo to load in order. The remnant of the center section substitution is the notch at its start. The fellow to the right is part of the original pan. |
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This white oak (Quercus alba) is probably less than a century old, and appears to have spent much of its life cantilevered along the ground. It is near a cliff at the edge of a ridge where thin soils support Dry Oak Forest, a community of white, chestnut, and red oak, with red maple and hop hornbeam.
Notes: The D40 refused to autofocus the first photo, so I manually focused each of the 170 shots. This was even less fun than you might think, and the results are unimpressive. Author: C. Fastie |
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There are more people in the fields then I could see when I was taking this shot. (315 images using the Gigapan) |
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Looking more or less northwards from the top of Castle Hill, the granite outcrop that forms the centre of the city of Townsville, the largest urban area in the tropical third of Australia |
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Nina Peak and Mount Bowen (to the right) from near the northern end of the Thorsborne Track walking track on Hinchinbrook Island. Nina Peak is an easy hike up to a very nice view, which I have captured in another gigapan. |
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Hambledon Hill is a prehistoric hill fort in Dorset, England, situated in the Blackmore Vale five miles north of Blandford Forum. The hill is a Chalk outcrop, on the south western corner of Cranborne Chase, separated from the Dorset Downs by the River Stour.
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