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Beth T took a LOT of pictures by hand of Pittsburgh (waterfront/bridge) and used the sticher to stich them together. The tiff file of this appears entirely different from the GigaPan, and the GigaPan viewed in the statcher looks prettty different from the GigaPan here on the site.
Find out more about Beth: http://cwgigapan.wordpress.com/2008/03/29/10/ |
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The "prototype for an infinite array of semi-autonomous percussive devices" Robot250 BigBot by Keny Marshall. Created from 380 photos (38x10). See another view of this BigBot at: http://share.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=6870
Read more about this BigBot at: http://www.robot250.org/festival/bigbots/marshall/ |
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The "Reach, Robot" Robot250 BigBot by Grisha Coleman. Created from 350 photos (25x14).
Read more about this BigBot at: http://www.robot250.org/festival/bigbots/coleman/ |
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A sunny day in the back yard... |
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http://GigapanMagazine.org vol 1 issue 1
Every Sunday for a year and a half, starting in October 1997, a group of Pittsburgh metal artists sneaked into the abandoned Carrie Furnace site, along with their tools and equipment. They used materials found on site to create a 45' tall deer head. The group - Industrial Arts Collective - is currently working on a large scale sculpture on the former Jones and Laughlin and LTV mill sites, on the South Side of Pittsburgh. More projects by IAC: http://www.geocities.com/~js_iac/pages/site_work/site_projects.html http://www.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=5641 More Gigapans and information about Carrie Furnace: http://www.gigapan.org/gigapans/36933/ exterior http://www.gigapan.org/gigapans/36914/ furnace & pouring house |
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The "prototype for an infinite array of semi-autonomous percussive devices" Robot250 BigBot by Keny Marshall. Created from 162 photos (18x9). See a 360-degree view of this BigBot at: http://share.gigapan.org/viewGigapan.php?id=6869
Read more about this BigBot at: http://www.robot250.org/festival/bigbots/marshall/ |
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Trees outside Carnegie Mellon's Cyert Hall. Gigapan Epic 100 canted downward 90 degrees taking an image set from the robot "horizon" up 45 degrees.
http://www.google.com |
