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Attempt at panoramic C&C please

No actually its 4 pictures that I took and then use photomerge on Adobe Bridge CS4 and then cropped in Photoshop and edited. So no it was 4 pictures originally not just one :)

Oh and about the time thing....I do live an hour away from the beach and an hour away from the mountains BUT my class was in 1.5 hours so really I could go there and come back and be in time for my class. Yes I procrastinated on that project...

You wouldn't cut the grass at a townhouse with a riding lawnmower would you?
Not sure what your implying by that but no I wouldn't
 
typically you would want to do a panorama for a scene that you wouldn't be able to fit in a single frame.
What you are displaying here, could easily fit in a single frame.
 
I sometimes paste a pan (created in PS into another image, or one of the originals to give it an exif, so that may be the case.
 
OK, from a technical standpoint, the image is a success. It's well-exposed, level, and is stitched well.

But from a photographic standpoint, it's just a snapshot of a street, some trees and a hill.
 
Here are the originals:

062.jpg


063.jpg


064.jpg


065.jpg
 
OK, from a technical standpoint, the image is a success. It's well-exposed, level, and is stitched well.

But from a photographic standpoint, it's just a snapshot of a street, some trees and a hill.
This is what I was asking...about the technical point. Yes I realize its boring and will do better on the next project
 
NEVER shoot a pano in ANY auto mode (A, P or S). ALWAYS shoot in full manual. You've got 4 shots, all with different exposures.

Look at your last two shots....... see the huge difference in exposure on the tree? This can cause major problems when stitching images together as the program may think they're different trees.
 
I gotta give him credit, in another thread, he was hitting on the blond OP........He gets a passing grade from me....
 
NEVER shoot a pano in ANY auto mode (A, P or S). ALWAYS shoot in full manual. You've got 4 shots, all with different exposures.

Look at your last two shots....... see the huge difference in exposure on the tree? This can cause major problems when stitching images together as the program may think they're different trees.
Yeah looking back I see what you mean. Thanks for the advice :)
 
Good grief I am beginning to feel like Foghorn Leghorn here.....

That other thread with the guitar, the original poster (OP) is blond, not you
 

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