From: jak bute on 11 Aug 2010 10:37 Is there some morphing software which can widen the angle of view in my photos? View from a rooftop in Wimbledon, London, UK http://bayimg.com/aANiGaAcf.jpg View from a hilltop of Pao de Acucar, Rio, Brazil http://bayimg.com/cAnIKaACF.jpg View from a rooftop in R. Piragibe Frota Aguiar, Rio http://www.postimage.org/image.php?v=TsvfXri -hb- (the REAL hummingbird) -- "All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed, second it is violently opposed, and third, it is accepted as self-evident" (Arthur Schopenhauer) Warning to criminals: all my images are copyright
From: Irwell on 11 Aug 2010 12:14 On Wed, 11 Aug 2010 16:37:18 +0200, jak bute wrote: > Is there some morphing software which can widen the angle of view in my > photos? > Helicon Filter has distortion capabilities.
From: dadiOH on 11 Aug 2010 12:11 jak bute wrote: > Is there some morphing software which can widen the angle of view in > my photos? You mean as if you'd photographed with a shorter focal length lens? If it ain't in the photo nothing can put it there. -- dadiOH ____________________________ dadiOH's dandies v3.06... ....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that. Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico
From: Mark F on 11 Aug 2010 14:59 On Wed, 11 Aug 2010 16:37:18 +0200, jak bute <luver(a)katebeckinsale.com> wrote: > Is there some morphing software which can widen the angle of view in my > photos? Morphing SOFTWARE can't widen the angle of view. You could: . crop so the image is wider compared to height, but the angle of view actually remains the same. . pan and stitch, so the final image has a wider angle of view . use a telecompressor in back of the lens to increase the angle of view, then crop so only the horizontal range is extended . use a telecompressor in front of the lens - also increases angle of view, but probably inferior to using one in back of the lens . use an anamorphic lens converter in front of the lens. (These were available for camcorders a few years ago for around US$100 to allow doing 16:9 recording on a 4:3 camera, but I didn't find any around that price now. Canon RATIO CONVERTER RC-72 for about US$250 was a close as I found. Note that these were likely made for NTSC camcorders, so the optical quality might not be as good as is needed now-a-days.) There also were some in the US$1000 range for use with projectors. .. use an anamorphic lens converter in back of the lens. (Think US$10K-25K Or, going beyond addons to your existing lens: I couldn't find any actual anamorphic lenses, but CinemaScope should have them and www.red.com seems to. Red Pro prim 25mm has about 56 degree by 31 degree field of view, about 1.8:1 (16:9 is 1.777:1) > > View from a rooftop in Wimbledon, London, UK > http://bayimg.com/aANiGaAcf.jpg > > View from a hilltop of Pao de Acucar, Rio, Brazil > http://bayimg.com/cAnIKaACF.jpg > > View from a rooftop in R. Piragibe Frota Aguiar, Rio > http://www.postimage.org/image.php?v=TsvfXri > > -hb- > (the REAL hummingbird)
From: DanP on 11 Aug 2010 15:49 On Aug 11, 3:37 pm, jak bute <lu...(a)katebeckinsale.com> wrote: > Is there some morphing software which can widen the angle of view in my > photos? > > View from a rooftop in Wimbledon, London, UKhttp://bayimg.com/aANiGaAcf.jpg > > View from a hilltop of Pao de Acucar, Rio, Brazilhttp://bayimg.com/cAnIKaACF.jpg > > View from a rooftop in R. Piragibe Frota Aguiar, Riohttp://www.postimage.org/image.php?v=TsvfXri > > -hb- > (the REAL hummingbird) > -- > "All truth passes through three stages. > First, it is ridiculed, second it is violently opposed, > and third, it is accepted as self-evident" > (Arthur Schopenhauer) > > Warning to criminals: all my images are copyright Cover the view you want with a few shots then stitch them together. http://hugin.sourceforge.net/download/ Anyone with half a brain can do it. DanP
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