Panoramic Photography Tips

Panoramic Photography Tips

These are a few panoramic images from our recent trip to Victoria, Australia and here are some tips of the method I use of taking and stitching multiple images to make a panorama.

Tripod Method

1.  It’s important to get the top of your tripod mount level so that when you pan the tripod head the horizon stays level.  This saves you having to loose parts of the image later when cropping to a level horizon.  You do this by adjusting the height of each tripod leg independently.  Some tripods have a small spirit bubble aid at the top of the tripod legs.  I also use a spirit bubble that attaches to the camera flash mount so I can double check the level as I pan the camera.  I can then make any further minor leg adjustments if required.

2.  It’s most important to use the camera in manual exposure mode.  If the camera is using any of the auto exposure modes, each frame is likely to be lighter or darker than it’s adjacent frame, this then becomes much harder at the stitching stage.  If you are including the sun in your final panorama image, take the initial exposure from the frame nearest to the one that includes the sun for a more balanced overall exposure.

3.  Choose a manual white balance setting so that the white balance remains constant throughout the scene.

4.  It’s also important to put the lens/camera in manual focus mode and focus manually.  You do not want the focus points changing between frames.

5.  When taking the images, start at one edge of the intended panorama, take the first shot, pan the camera making sure you have at least one third overlap of frame, take the second shot, then repeat until you get to the other end of your intended panorama image.  I always start at the left edge of the panorama, I just find this easier when stitching.  Also, bear in mind that you may often loose some information from the top, bottom and edges of your panorama at the cropping stage after stitching.

6.  I always use a shutter release when the camera is tripod mounted.  This helps speed up the panning and taking process and stops any vibrations when shooting long exposures.  I also try not to touch the lens when panning just in case I inadvertently touch the focus ring.

7.  Composition is equally important in panoramic photography as any other type of photography, so know the main rules of composition and also experiment by breaking them.  Sometimes points of interest at the edges of the frame often work to help lead the eye into the image and keep it there.

8.  Switch your camera to live mode to aid composition and manual focus.

9.  Be careful with very wide angle lenses as perspective can often look odd when stitched into a panoramic picture.

10.  Watch out for movement within your panorama, such as people, transport, flora blowing in the wind and waves breaking on a beach.  These can sometimes cause overlapping sections that don’t line up at the stitching process and ruin the final image.

11.  Experiment using your camera in both the vertical and horizontal position while creating your panorama.

12.  For very precise panoramas you can buy a panoramic head for your tripod.  This head enables you to move the mounted camera back, forth, left and right so that the Nodal Point of the lens is directly over the axis of rotation of the tripod, this will eliminate parallax error.  Each lens has a different nodal point and can be quite tricky to find.  For anyone interested here is a link to a youtube video that demonstrates the setup.

Hand Held Method

Use the same guidelines as with the tripod method.  Manual Exposure, white balance and focus.  Try and keep any horizon level and allow room for some cropping after stitching.

Stitching the Panorama

I won’t go into this in great detail as it will depend on what software you use to stitch the panorama together.  I usually use Adobe Photoshop ‘merge to panorama’ which I can also access directly from the RAW files in Adobe Lightroom.  Here is a link on Adobe TV on how this works on Adobe Photoshop Elements.

If you haven’t got Photoshop or Photoshop Elements another excellent free programme that I can thoroughly recommend is called Hug-in.

To Summarise

Level the tripod head

Level the Camera

Use manual exposure, white balance and focus

Take the series of shots from the left edge of your panorama

Allow a little room for cropping

Check Composition

Check for movement within image

Stitch the Panorama

Experiment and print

Margam Park Orangery Wedding Photography Wales

Margam Park Orangery Wedding Photography

Here are a few of our favourite images from last Saturdays wedding of Charlie and Ryan at Margam Park Orangery, near Port Talbot.  The day started at Charlie’s parents house in the Mumbles, Swansea with her parents and bridesmaids helping with the proceedings.  We met Ryan at St. Paul’s Church, Sketty, Swansea prior to the ceremony.  The ushers were doing a great job, ferrying the guests into church under umbrellas.   Charlie was driven to the church in the very cool VW Beetle.  Ryan’s Uncle Bernard helped officiate the service making it all the more special and aided by the beautiful singing form the Dunvant Male Voice Choir.  The rain was still relentless so there was no hanging about at the church and all the guests made their way to Margam Orangery for the reception.  We were lucky enough to get access to the House at Margam to do some of the Bridal portraits.  Charlie and Ryan even ventured out at dusk into the abbey ruins for a few shots at some of their favourite spots.  Their band Perfect Day provided the evening entertainment.

For a further look at our images of our South Wales Wedding photography, please have a look at our Gallery or other Blog Posts and if you have any questions about our services don’t hesitate to leave a comment below or contact us.

 

Portrait Photography Wales

Beach Portrait Photography South Wales

Here are a few images of Gemma and Matt’s beach portrait photography shoot on Saturday at our local beach at Llantwit Major.  Amazingly it was actually warm enough to take our winter coats off, lets hope spring is finally here!  The sun was so bright, so we decided to shoot a mixture of silhouette, high key and reflected light shots.  Gemma and Matt were great sports and battled the rocks, slippery seaweed and incoming tide to get their outdoor portraits.  It was great fun and we can’t wait to photograph their wedding, which is coming up at the New House Country Hotel, Thornhill, Cardiff.

Bohol Philippines

The Island of Bohol Philippines

We met up with Christian, a friend from our Tao Philippines trip and had a great day trip discovering parts of Bohol.  We started at a statue commemorating a 16th century blood compact between the Spanish and Bohols.  Nearby is the Church of Immaculate Conception in Baclayon.  Completed in 1727 and made of coral stone it is considered one of the Philippines oldest churches.  We had a short stop at a butterfly farm before heading off to see the islands infamous Tarsier.  The tiny cute Tarsier is one of the worlds smallest primates.  They are nocturnal hunters feeding mostly on insects and apparently can jump between 3 and 5 metres!  We then travelled through forest, paddy fields and small villages to the Chocolate Hills, Bohol’s best known tourist attraction.  They are very uniform grass covered hills between 30 and 50 metres in height, geologists think they are a weathered Marine Limestone that sit on top of impermeable clay.  I prefer the legend that they came into existence when two giants threw stones and sand at each other in a fight that lasted for days.  When they were finally exhausted they made friends, left the island and left behind the hills!  We decided not to wait at the main viewpoint for sunset as the direction of light wasn’t great so we headed off-road into the surrounding Paddy fields.  A very friendly local farmer guided us to a perfect spot to watch the sun go down, he even went off and got us some fresh coconuts for us to sip!  In the meantime Sacha had met all the local children and sent them out to make sure we weren’t lost, it was such a shame it was too dark by then to take any pictures.  Running alongside our taxi they gave us a great Philippine sendoff!!!