
this is the only way to get some vertical scene, otherwise the panorama will be shaped like a hotdog. do not change them for any part of the panorama. put camera into manual metering mode and use those settings. once you have found the brightest check the fstop and shutter speed. you are trying to find the brightest part of you panorama scene to be. set the exposure by pressing halfway and noteing the fstop and shutter speed. again make a max effort to get the camera level. if your tripod does not have a level builtin then buy one that slides into your flash hotshoe. note that the joints between the 7 shots cannot be seen.įor panoramas-use tripod.

the attached pano is 7 seven shot, 12odegrees, taken with a 20mm lens. QTVR cannot be shown on the web due to their size but panos can. note for ANY qtvr or pano with more than i row you must make sure that there is a a overlap between adjoining shots and each row of shots vertically. the last QTVR took about 15minutes to shoot and a bout an hour for the software to make it. it is done fully automatically, after setup by the software, and simply put into any folder that you wish. I use PTGuiPro software to put the 24 shots together to make the QTVR. the first revolution is tilted 30degrees up and the other revolution is tilted 30degrees down. with my rig it takes 24 shots, 12 each in 2 revolutions. To get from a pano to QTVR you simpoly do a full circle.
#Panorama maker 3d how to#
al the end of this reply is my how to on panoramas. you should know how to take a pano before you try QTVR. i use the 12 end of a 12-24zoom and it works fine.i end up with black area at the very top and bottom, which is quite small. if you are using a 10mm lens or the 10mm stting on 10-to zoom it will work. QTVR is a view shown on quicktime that pans around in a circle with some vertical adjustment possible.

Ithuink that what you are talking about is not called 3D views, but QTVR.
