Posted on February 8, 2022
An early morning panorama of Atlantic City from the Wildlife Drive at the Brigantine Division of the Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge in Oceanville NJ. This is a 3 image panorama shot with a 7.5mm Fisheye lens on an Olympus OMD-1. Before I could make the panorama I had to de-fish the Fisheye images in Photoshop using the Adaptive Wide Angle Feature under the “Filter” Selections along the top right selections. Once they were de-fished I loaded the 3 images into a layered Photoshop File and selected all 3 layers and used “Edit – Align Layers” for the 3 images, then once they were aligned I used “Edit Blend Layers” for the Final Panorama.
Category: Blog, Brigantine Division, Brigantine NWR, Brigantine NWR, Oceanville NJ, Cloudscapes, De-Fishing Fisheye Lenses, Edwin B Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge, Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge, Equipment, Favorite Locations, Fisheye Lens, Image Stacking, Landscapes, Oceanville NJ, Panorama & Stacked Images, Panoramas, Skies and Clouds, Skyscapes & Clouds, sunrise panoramas, Tips & Techniques, wildlife drive Tagged: 7 Artisans 7.5mm Fisheye lens, 7 Artisans 7.5mm m43 Fisheye Lens, Atlantic City Skyline, Brigantine Divison Edwin B Forsythe NWR, Brigantine Landscape, Brigantine Multi-Image Landscape, Brigantine Panorama, Brigantine Panorama with Atlantic City Background, Brigantine Wildlife Drive, DeFishing Fisheye Lens, Olympus OM D Mk I
Posted on February 28, 2019
As I was photographing these Brant Ducks, I also shot a series of the flying birds for a panorama, to see how it might work out. I was surprised it pretty much just worked out fine with no retouching of overlapping Brants. I was using a m43 camera with a Panasonic 14-140mm lens @48mm. I started on the left and just shot a quick series going to the right. I always shoot the pano of flying birds in the direction they are going. Seems to work better that way. The files adjusted in Adobe Camera Raw and the panorama assembled & blended in Photoshop for the final image.