This image shows a reprojected version of this panorama. It is the oldest shopping mall of The Netherlands. The base image for this Droste type reprojection is this image.
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This is the blog of the PanoTwins
The Droste effect is named after a Dutch manufacturer of cocoa powder, that used this effect on his tin boxes. It is a kind of recursion technique which repeats the image in smaller versions of itself inside the image. Read more about it here.
This image shows a reprojected version of this panorama. It is the oldest shopping mall of The Netherlands. The base image for this Droste type reprojection is this image.
This image shows a Droste type reprojection of the Piața Unirii in Timișoara, Romania.
In the previous post I presented a reprojected version of this panorama. I used the reprojected panorama as a base image for a Droste type reprojection. The result is the christmas tree below.
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When I saw Jürgen’s previous post a reprojected version of this WWP panorama came to my mind:
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This image shows a reprojected image of the Cine-Teatro São João in Palmela. The first projection was stereographic down, the second one droste.
This image shows a reprojected version of this panorama. It is the staircase of the Bavarian State Library in a Droste reprojection.
This image shows a reprojected version of this panorama. It is the staircase of the Bavarian State Library in a Droste reprojection.
In this article I try to explain the steps, that were necessary to get the result I presented in the previous post. The consecutive steps are explained below and a preview of the result is shown twice. The first one is the original image, the second one a coloured chequered artificial image.
These images show reprojected versions of this panorama. The tram station “Münchner Freiheit” has a futuristic roof built of white steel, painted green on the inside of the three part pillars. The initial panorama for these reprojections was made inside one of these structures.
The original panorama for these reprojections was shot in the Viscardihof in Munich. The spherical panorama was reprojected to a stereographic view. This image was again reprojected applying a Droste effect. The artist of the sculpture is Olafur Eliasson.