Little planet's with bulb timer

Started by Anton2707, December 19, 2013, 12:01:11 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Anton2707

I use 600D and samyang 8mm f3.5 for this...

1 by Ant2707, on Flickr

2 by Ant2707, on Flickr

3 by Ant2707, on Flickr

4 by Ant2707, on Flickr

5 by Ant2707, on Flickr

6 by Ant2707, on Flickr

7 by Ant2707, on Flickr

8 by Ant2707, on Flickr

9 by Ant2707, on Flickr

14 by Ant2707, on Flickr

13 by Ant2707, on Flickr

17 by Ant2707, on Flickr

19 by Ant2707, on Flickr

20 by Ant2707, on Flickr

22 by Ant2707, on Flickr

23 by Ant2707, on Flickr

24 by Ant2707, on Flickr

18 by Ant2707, on Flickr
In last shoot i use dualiso thing.

Ripcord

How did you do this? Can you share the details? looks amazing!
Canon EOS 60D

Anton2707

It's just spherical panorama with some different look

RenatoPhoto

Very nice!  I will be trying this soon!
Thanks for sharing
http://www.pululahuahostal.com  |  EF 300 f/4, EF 100-400 L, EF 180 L, EF-S 10-22, Samyang 14mm, Sigma 28mm EX DG, Sigma 8mm 1:3.5 EX DG, EF 50mm 1:1.8 II, EF 1.4X II, Kenko C-AF 2X

arrinkiiii


Mirazimov

Mirazimov Photographer http://www.mirazimov.com
Canon RebelT2i, Canon 6D and a lot of optics.

kazeone

Quote from: Anton2707 on December 19, 2013, 02:12:39 PM
It's just spherical panorama with some different look

can you explain this a bit further please. ^^;;

Anton2707

Quote from: kazeone on January 02, 2014, 07:14:48 AM
can you explain this a bit further please. ^^;;
I'm stich spherical panorama in PTGuy, and in projection select "little planet"... Nothing hard :)

kazeone

Quote from: Anton2707 on January 04, 2014, 11:25:46 AM
I'm stich spherical panorama in PTGuy, and in projection select "little planet"... Nothing hard :)

yay for google search so you meant PTGui, interesting, I will download the lite and see how I like it :)

Anton2707

Quote from: kazeone on January 10, 2014, 07:02:31 PM
yay for google search so you meant PTGui, interesting, I will download the lite and see how I like it :)
ah, yes PTGui  ;D

kihlbahkt

I really like those images. Thanks for sharing
600D x2

Myxir

EOS 1100D
18-55mm/3.5-5.6 IS II | 55-250mm/4-5,6 IS II | 40mm/2,8 Pancake
Metz MB 24 AF-1

andrew.mcmillan.37

Thank you this is very inspiring, hope everyone has fun with this

Anton2707


WLShafor

Thanks for sharing is there a link you can share with us that shows us how to do this step by step using the program?

Anton2707

Quote from: WLShafor on July 31, 2014, 04:00:29 AM
Thanks for sharing is there a link you can share with us that shows us how to do this step by step using the program?
Okay, next planet be here with manual :)

WLShafor

Quote from: Anton2707 on August 04, 2014, 03:21:22 PM
Okay, next planet be here with manual :)
Awesome I can't wait to try this out! Thanks!

MistressBand

Thanks for posting and explaining how to make these!  I had fun trying this out today!


DeafEyeJedi

Definitely inspired by this as well... Does using a 8mm fisheye lens the only way to achieve this look?

Would a 14mm be too cropped?

Thanks for sharing @Anton2707
5D3.113 | 5D3.123 | EOSM.203 | 7D.203 | 70D.112 | 100D.101 | EOSM2.* | 50D.109

MistressBand

I used a 24mm on a full frame for this.  The narrower the lens, the more shots you would have to take.  The one I posted was 12 photos, 30 degree intervals, in a vertical camera position.  If I do another one, I will probably take 2 photos per angle instead of 1, to get better detail in the ground.  I couldn't get the little planet profile because of this in PTGui.  Had to stitch them together in PTGui and then apply the polar coordinate filter in Photoshop instead.  If I had even coverage bellow and above the horizon, I am sure I could have done the whole process in PTGui.

I dont know

I really like it. Thanks for sharing.


mandi007

Wow super, please share the Technic to shot like this

chrismcdonald423

Thanks for sharing this awesome Technic. I just want to know if you have any link to share with us that shows us how to do this step by step using the program?