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.
Show on mapCategory: Reprojected Droste
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.
Reprojected Piața Unirii in Timișoara, Romania
This image shows a Droste type reprojection of the Piața Unirii in Timișoara, Romania.
Reprojected Imberger Horn Summit View (Christmas Tree)
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.
Reprojected subway station (Westfriedhof, Munich)
When I saw Jürgen’s previous post a reprojected version of this WWP panorama came to my mind:
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Reprojected Cine-Teatro São João (Droste)
This image shows a reprojected image of the Cine-Teatro São João in Palmela. The first projection was stereographic down, the second one droste.
Show on mapReprojected Library Staircase (Again)
This image shows a reprojected version of this panorama. It is the staircase of the Bavarian State Library in a Droste reprojection.
Show on mapReprojected Library Staircase
This image shows a reprojected version of this panorama. It is the staircase of the Bavarian State Library in a Droste reprojection.
Show on mapReprojected Three Green Stripes (Making Of)
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.
- I decided to make a panorama from inside a tripartite pillar. The exact pillar is shown on the image below.
- I used my usual workflow and took three images for each direction. Furthermore I made a zenith and nadir shot. I used the Sigma 8mm F4 fisheye lens on a Sony Alpha 700 and shot RAW images. Postprocessing was made with Bibble 5 Pro.
- I stitched the images into an equirectangular image using PTGui Pro. The final panorama was 8000×4000 pixels in size.
- This equirectangular image was reprojected using again PTGui Pro using a stereographic projection with a field of view of 333° and a pitch angle of 90°. The result is the following image. The original image had a size of 5550×5550 pixel.
- For a Droste spiral effect I had in mind you need a somehow circular masked image. I’ve chosen to mask the “leafes” and scale the image down to 4000×4000 pixel. The result was the following image :
- The last step in the transformation process was again a reprojection applying the Droste effect using the Pixel Bender Toolkit. You find the Pixel Bender filter and an introduction into the Droste effect in this post. The basic parameters for the Droste filter were: strandMirror: yes; transparentInside: yes; transparentOutside: yes; twist: yes; periodicity: 3; strands: 2. I played around with the rest of the parameters until I was satisfied with the result.
Reprojected Three Green Stripes
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.
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Reprojected Café Fünf Höfe
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.
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