Panorama

Lonsdale Quay Photography

Over the past several weeks, I’ve had the opportunity to experiment with many different photography techniques. During a recent trip to Lonsdale Quay, I got a number of shots from the pier, including this shot of the famous ‘Q’ sign.


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Posted by pbusswood / 12.10.11
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East Van Panoramic HDR

Hi again, folks!

You may have read my previous post regarding my Photography Project Proposal. To recap, I thought for my final photography project, I would experiment with long exposures on an inexpensive digital point-and-shoot camera. I shot some photographs of fireworks and experimented with moving the camera around in my hand to create interesting shapes with stationary lights–if you don’t know what I’m talking about, have a look at the last picture in the gallery of my previous post to see what I mean.

I ultimately decided not to use these for my final photography project, however, I consider them to be Part A, if you will.

Anyway, my REAL final photography project is an HDR Panoramic Photograph of my back yard in residential East Vancouver. A picture is worth a thousand words, so without further ado, here it is:

East Van HDR Panorama

Cheers,

Brad

Posted by Brad Hussey / 11.18.10
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The Making of Lynncanyon.ca

To be a part of the Interactive Design Program at Capilano University is an incredible experience. The opportunities to expand your knowledge are endless. For the first time in ages I felt that “The World is My Oyster” and the program helped me to indulge in it. The program offered a self directed study and I took full advantage of it to broaden my knowledge and understanding of the Interactive Media industry.

With a background in photography I wanted to try something that was in the same field, but web oriented. I thought that trying out 360 degree panoramic photography was a good choice to increase my knowledge in the photographic as well as the web industry. I did some research of some amazing panoramic photos and virtual tours of hotels, cathedrals, and car interiors. I kept thinking of how to jump further outside the box so I took a different approach and picked a subject that I knew quite well. An exterior (outdoor) virtual tour.

Lynn Canyon Park was my chosen subject to photograph and the end goal was to have a virtual tour of the park live on a website. I sought out the best possible website URL and lynncanyon.ca seemed to fit quite well. It just the beginning of Fall and the weather was still great so I decided to start taking photos right away. I rode my mountain bike into the park a few mornings each week equipped with a tripod, panoramic head, and a Nikon D80 DSLR camera. I loaded up with memory cards as I would be taking a large quantity of photos each day and a spare battery as well.

3 weeks and 20 hours of shooting later I had a good set of images to work with. For each 360 degree scene I set up the tripod, checked the lighting for consistency in each direction and did a rotation of 18 photographs with the panoramic tripod head. Once the scene was complete, I would hike further into the park and take another 18 shots. Each day of shooting I photographed approximately 5 scenes. At the end of the 3 weeks I had photographed over 50 scenes (9,000 Photos).

Taking the photos was half the battle, and the fun part. I spent the next month stitching each scene together with Pro Software called PTGUI. This software was highly recommended on several forums so I gave it a shot. It worked wonders for what I wanted to accomplish. The next step was to take each stitched scene and put it into a virtual tour that linked each scene together. An open source application called PanoSalado that was currently in development appeared to be the best option. It runs on flash which appeared to be more promising than QuickTime VR. More web users have flash installed, at least thats what all the stats said.

The application took a lot of time to work with and a good knowledge of PHP and Actionscript is recommended to deal with it. I found several discussions online to set up my first 360 pano and the software developers were quite helpful with any questions I sent to them.

3 months and approximately 60 hours of production time, lynncanyon.ca was online. Today the website recieves visitors from all over the world and is increasing in hits everyday.

Visit Lynn Canyon and join the Lynn Canyon Facebook Fanpage!

Lynncanyon.ca was created by Jaden Nyberg – View Portfolio

Posted by jadennyberg / 06.18.09
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