Posted on October 19, 2022
We went to the Plainsboro Preserve to get in a good walk so I did not take a camera with me. The Preserve had a lot of Fall Color, so I used my iP11 Pro to take a variety of multi-image panorama views during our walk. The Images here were mainly taken with the views going to the path to the Lake & the Lake itself. The Featured Image is a 21 Image panorama using the iP11’s 6mm lens and is 100.5 inches x 13.2 inches and is 340 megs. The iP11’s 6mm lens is equivalent to a ~52mm lens on a Full Frame Digital Camera.
Category: Blog, clouds, Cloudscapes, Colorful Trees, Equipment, fall leaves, Image Stacking, iP11 Pro, iPhone, iPhone multi-Image Cloudscapes, iPhone multi-image panoramas, iPhone photography, iPhone photos, Lake McCormack, Lakes, Landscapes, Multi-Row & Multi-layer stacked panoramas, Panorama & Stacked Images, Panoramas, Plainsboro Preserve, Skies and Clouds Tagged: Audobon Plainsboro Preserve, iP11 multi-image landscapes, iP11 Pro Panoramas, iPhone 11 Plus, iPhone 11 Pro, iPhone 11 Pro multi-image panoramas, iPhone 11 Pro Panoramas, iPhone 11 Pro Photography, iphone image panoramas, iphone image panoramas in Photoshop, iphone image stacking, iPhone landscapes, iPhone multi-image panoramas, iPhone Panoramas, iphone panoramas in photoshop, iPhone photography, Multi-image iP11 Pro Panoramas, Multi-Image iPhone Panoramas, Multi-image panoramas, Panorama laandscape, Panorama tips, panoramas, photoshop panoramas, Plainsboro Preserve, Plainsboro Preserve Panoramas, working with iphone images in Photoshop
Posted on April 10, 2022
On our walks in our Community I usually do not take a Camera but if I see something interesting I have my iPhone 11 Pro with me. I liked this Flowering Tree I saw as we were walking back to our Condo. I tried shooting a few different versions with 2 different lenses – the 1.5mm (Full Frame Camera Equivalent lens -13mm) and the 6mm lens (Full Frame Camera Equivalent lens -52mm). The Featured Image is a 5 image Panorama taken with the 1.5mm lens, assembled in Photoshop.
Category: Blog, Colorful Trees, Image Stacking, iPhone, iPhone multi-Image Cloudscapes, iPhone multi-image panoramas, Multi-Row & Multi-layer stacked panoramas, Panorama & Stacked Images, Panoramas, Rossmoor, Skies and Clouds, Skyscapes & Clouds, Stacked Images Tagged: iP11 multi-image landscapes, iP11 Pro Multi-Image & Multi-row Panoramas, iP11 Pro Panoramas, iPhone 11 Pro, iphone image panoramas in Photoshop, iPhone photography, Multi-image iP11 Pro Panoramas
Posted on April 9, 2022
As we were taking a walk in our community I noticed the dense clouds above us. In one area of the thick cloud cover there was a circular opening in the Dark Cloud cover. I thought it looked interesting so I took a series of images with my iPhone 11 Pro. The Featured Image was taken with the 6mm lens with a digital zoom added (216 percent) for a Full Frame Equivalent Image taken @ 111 mm. Usually I do not use the digital zoom feature on the iPhone, but wanted a full image featuring the “Hole”. I did not take out the “Noise” in the Featured Image since I thought it added some to the “Dark Mood” of the image. I then shot a 2 image vertical panorama to get more of the clouds above since below would have some buildings that I did not want. Then I backed off and shot a series of wider views of the Dark Clouds.
Category: Blog, Cloudscapes, Favorite Locations, iPhone, iPhone photography Tagged: clouds, Cloudscapes, iP11 multi-image landscapes, iP11 Panoramas, iP11 Pro images, iP11 Pro Panoramas, iP11 w digital zoom, iPhone 11 Pro, iphone image panoramas, iphone image panoramas in Photoshop, iPhone landscapes, iPhone photography, Multi-image iP11 Pro Panoramas, Multi-image panorama
Posted on February 4, 2022
On our visit to the Brigantine Division of the Edwin B. Forsythe NWR I was using a variety of cameras to make a series of multi-image panoramas. I shot a lot of images so I would have a “library” of images to use for posting here during the Winter months. I was using the following cameras – Canon R with a 150-600mm lens, Panasonic LX-1 Pocket Camera in 16×9 format, OM-D 1 Olympus with a 7.5mm Fisheye lens and a iPhone 11 Pro. For this post all images were with the iPhone 11 Pro with mostly the 1.5mm lens (Full Frame Field of View Equivalent ~ 13mm) & the 4.3mm lens (Full Frame Field of View Equivalent ~ 26mm). The Featured Image was taken early in the am before the Wildlife Drive got crowded. I used my iPhone 11 with the 4.3mm lens to take a series of 12 overlapping images for the panorama image.
Category: Blog, Brigantine Division, Brigantine NWR, Brigantine NWR, Oceanville NJ, Cloudscapes, Edwin B Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge, Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge, Equipment, Favorite Locations, Image Stacking, iPhone, iPhone multi-Image Cloudscapes, iPhone multi-image panoramas, iPhone photography, Landscapes, Oceanville NJ, Panorama & Stacked Images, Panoramas, Skies and Clouds, Skyscapes & Clouds, Stacked Images, wildlife drive Tagged: Brigantine Division, Brigantine Divison Edwin B Forsythe NWR, Edwin B Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge, Edwin B. Forsythe NWR, Edwin B. Forsythe Wildlife Drive, iP11 multi-image landscapes, iP11 Pro, iP11 Pro images, iP11 Pro Panoramas, iphone image panoramas in Photoshop, iPhone multi-image panoramas, iPhone photography, Multi-image iP11 Pro Panoramas, Multi-image panorama, Multi-image panoramas, MultiImage Panoramas
Posted on January 3, 2022
It was a nice day on Dec. 31st so we went to Davidsons Mill Pond Park to take a nice walk. I thought I would also shoot a series of Multi-image Landscape Panoramas, but I could not decide what Camera & Lens combo to take. So I decided to take a few choices to see which worked better for what I was trying to photograph. I previously had cleaned up & reorganized my camera & lens cabinet and found a charger for an old Panasonic LX-1 Pocket camera that I used to use for wide shots when I was mostly photographing with my larger Canon gear, so I took that along also to see how it stood up to the newer Digital Cameras. I also set the LX-1 to 16×9 format. My iPhones & adjusting the images in Adobe Camera Raw had replaced me using the Panasonic LX-1 Pocket Camera many years ago. It was a nice day to get out and photograph some landscapes with nice cloud formations. After working on my images I was surprised how well the Panasonic LX-1 images did when compared to the newer cameras. Opening the LX-1 images in Adobe Camera Raw did get more detail out of the images. So the following multi-image panorama images are from an Olympus OMD-1 with a 7.5mm fisheye lens (& then DeFished in Photoshop), the iP11 Pro using the 1.5mm lens (full Frame camera FOV equivalent ~13mm) and the Panasonic LX-1 using the lens equivalent to a Field of View to a 28mm lens on a Full Frame Digital camera.
The Featured Image is a handheld 4 Image Panorama taken with 7.5mm Fisheye Lens on an Olympus OMD-1 & De-Fished the Image in PhotoShop using the Adaptive Wide Angle Filter listed under the selections on the top “Filter” selections.
Category: Blog, Composites, Davidsons Mill Pond Park, Equipment, iPhone, iPhone multi-image panoramas, Landscapes, Panorama & Stacked Images, Panoramas, Skies and Clouds, Skyscapes & Clouds Tagged: cloud panoramas, Davidson’s Mill Pond Park, Davidsons Mill Pond Panoramas, Davidsons Mill Pond Park, Davidsons Mill Pond Park Fisheye images, iPhone 11 Pro multi-image panoramas, iPhone 11 Pro Panoramas, iphone image panoramas in Photoshop, landscapes, Multi-image iP11 Pro Panoramas, Multi-image panoramas, MultiImage Panoramas, Panasonic LX1, Panorama laandscape, panoramas, photoshop panoramas
Posted on May 21, 2021
A while ago we woke up to a very foggy morning. We went out to see if we could get a few interesting Fog panoramas. I was just using my iP11 Pro because it was more waterproof than my other cameras. Plus easier to carry in case it started to rain. The Featured Image is made from 10 horizontal iP11 Pro horizontal images taken with the 6mm lens. Then I loaded all 10 images into one layered Photoshop file and blended the images automatically into the final panorama.