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Bob in IDaho, who, on vacation in Skyline Drive in Virginia, stopped at the gift shop at Panorama and had someone take our picture. There was some kid upstairs in the scene. I Big Brothered her out of existance. No guilt.
"Phil,I did this technique for years before Helicon hit the market, usually with three shots in Photoshop. The only "problem" I had was the change in size at the top and bottom edges of slices of a deep vertical shot. This could be corrected with the barrel/pincushion distortion tool, but it took some guessing. The same problem occurs in stitching together shots for a panorama, and it depends on the focal length of the lens. At 24mm on a DSLR a barrel correction of -7 (a pincushion of +7) is a good starting point. I've also used the "skew" tool to match the edges, as it can be faster, and you can see the results on-screen. It's easier to stitch together 6 shots at 24mm than 3 shots at 12mm (those focal lengths are just approximations)."-----------------Thanks for the input, Pete-I too have tried stitching together panorama shots, and it's a bugger!I compliled one I took at the beach, and didn't notice each exposure was changing because I left the exposure on automatic. Not only was the distortion there, but each exposure was darker than the one beside it to compensate for the positionof the sun. Doh!There's another little effect that happens when compositing in Photoshop, and I think you're touching on it as well. When you focus on the back, theimage is slightly magnified. I think this accounts for the "squashed" foreground-to-background effect in some of my photos.Like I mentioned earlier, I'm not a Helicon detractor, just offering another technique to fall back on. I think Helicon does great on solid objects, but just as you said it gets confused on thingslike railings and ship rigging, those kind of subjects.Nice photos of your layout in the new N-Scale, by the way. I just got a copy yesterday.Take care, ;D-Phil