This is from my 2018 calender either the February or the August page.
See the interactive version here.
Show on mapThis is the blog of the PanoTwins
This is from my 2018 calender either the February or the August page.
See the interactive version here.
Show on mapThis is from my 2018 calender either the January or the July page.
This Droste type reprojection was generated from a spherical panorama I shot standing in the middle of Haagse Passage in The Hague.
See the interactive version here.
Show on mapThis image is from the June page of my 2018 calender. This image shows a remapped photosphere and was taken inside the long distance train station of Frankfurt Airport. Reprojection is little planet (stereographic down).
Show on mapThis image is from the April page of my 2018 calender. This reprojected spherical panorama shows Split Point Lighthouse from the viewing platform near the cliff.
Show on mapThis image is from the February page of my 2018 calender. This image shows a reprojected spherical panorama which was taken in front of the entrance of the Shrine of Remembrance. Reprojection is little planet (stereographic).
This is from my 2018 calender either the February or the August page.
See the interactive version here.
Show on mapThis is from my 2018 calender either the January or the July page.
This Transverse Mercator reprojection was generated from a spherical panorama I shot standing in the middle of Haagse Passage in The Hague.
See the interactive version here.
Show on mapThis spherical panorama was taken inside the Mall of Berlin.
Technique:
The shooting was done with a 3 meter (appx. 10 ft) pole to reach a more elevated viewpoint. The lens was mounted with a custom-made bracket. Stitched from five images taken with a Walimex (Samyang) 7.5mm fish eye lens on a Sony ILCE-6000. Four images around and an additional image for the ground.
This is a panorama taken with the Panono Explorer. The camera was mounted on a 6,5m high painter pole.
This is a panorama taken with the Panono Explorer. The camera was mounted on a 6,5m high painter pole.