Tips for proper small rooms rendering?
Posted: Feb 19, 2016 6:06 am
Hi,
I'm planning a trip to and hopefully "bring back" with me the feeling of being there thru my captures.
I intended this question for similar subjects too since to me it seems fitting in its application since I've seen some amazing 360° panoramas done by cavers here.
I was thinking that apart carefully composing a few shots, I may benefit with a long series of overlapping pictures to ideally reproduce the whole surfaces, which aren't that far apart AFAIK (i.e. no large room).
Using flash isn't apparently a problem, however I think it may eventually ruin the stitching in post-processing by uneven diffusion on overlapping so (bounce flash may be better, or still light and long exposures), I'd like to know if I'm missing something important in the following list I made in order to achieve good results:
- tripod (so that handheld captures in low light won't bother me)
- hotshoe level (so that I stop taking uneven panoramas)
- panoramic head (obvsiously set to no-parallax point)
- wide-angle lens (unfortunately just a 18mm on cropped sensor)
- shooting at f/8, lowest ISO
Any ideas and experience welcome, thank you very much.
I'm planning a trip to and hopefully "bring back" with me the feeling of being there thru my captures.
I intended this question for similar subjects too since to me it seems fitting in its application since I've seen some amazing 360° panoramas done by cavers here.
I was thinking that apart carefully composing a few shots, I may benefit with a long series of overlapping pictures to ideally reproduce the whole surfaces, which aren't that far apart AFAIK (i.e. no large room).
Using flash isn't apparently a problem, however I think it may eventually ruin the stitching in post-processing by uneven diffusion on overlapping so (bounce flash may be better, or still light and long exposures), I'd like to know if I'm missing something important in the following list I made in order to achieve good results:
- tripod (so that handheld captures in low light won't bother me)
- hotshoe level (so that I stop taking uneven panoramas)
- panoramic head (obvsiously set to no-parallax point)
- wide-angle lens (unfortunately just a 18mm on cropped sensor)
- shooting at f/8, lowest ISO
Any ideas and experience welcome, thank you very much.