Tag Archive for 'planet'

Odds and ends: Sept-Dec

Over the last few months, there have been a bunch of photos that I’ve wanted to post on here but they didn’t really fit in with anything else. So, in no particular order, here are some odds and ends from September through December.

(C-T photo Max Gersh) ©2010

(C-T photo Max Gersh) ©2010

(C-T photo Max Gersh) ©2010

(C-T photo Max Gersh) ©2010

This next image was shot to be the cover of a special basketball preview tab. The two players are two of the best in the county. This image was shot using my DIY nodal plate. There are a few mistakes but I think they happened because I was rushed and may have actually taken too many pictures.

(C-T photo Max Gersh) ©2010

(C-T photo Max Gersh) ©2010

Lesley Phillips, wife of fomer Greenfield officer Will Phillips, speaks to the media Tuesday afternoon outside of the Henry County Justice Center. Phillips' husband was killed when a vehicle driven by Sue Ann Vanderbeck hit him while he was riding a bicycle during a police exercise in Knightstown on Sept. 30. (C-T photo Max Gersh) ©2010

Lesley Phillips, wife of fomer Greenfield officer Will Phillips, speaks to the media Tuesday afternoon outside of the Henry County Justice Center. Phillips’ husband was killed when a vehicle driven by Sue Ann Vanderbeck hit him while he was riding a bicycle during a police exercise in Knightstown on Sept. 30. (C-T photo Max Gersh) ©2010
Opal Dixon talks with Sgt. Adrian Darwin after her Jeep went through a building Monday afternoon while backing down her driveway. (C-T photo Max Gersh) ©2010

Opal Dixon talks with Sgt. Adrian Darwin after her Jeep went through a building Monday afternoon while backing down her driveway. (C-T photo Max Gersh) ©2010

Emergency responders stand on an overpass along County Road 500S Thursday afternoon after a vehicle occupied by two 16-year-old girls left the roadway and landed in a small creek bed. (C-T photo Max Gersh) ©2010

Emergency responders stand on an overpass along County Road 500S Thursday afternoon after a vehicle occupied by two 16-year-old girls left the roadway and landed in a small creek bed. (C-T photo Max Gersh) ©2010

Blake A. Dye, president and CEO of Henry County Hospital, talks in his office Thursday afternoon. Dye will be leaving Henry County Hospital to become the new president of the St. Vincent Heart Center of Indiana in Indianapolis. (C-T photo Max Gersh) ©2010

Blake Dye, president and CEO of Henry County Hospital, talks in his office Thursday afternoon. Dye will be leaving Henry County Hospital to become the new president of the St. Vincent Heart Center of Indiana in Indianapolis. (C-T photo Max Gersh) ©2010

St. Louis Arch as a panoramic planet

Have you ever wondered what the St. Louis Gateway Arch and its surroundings would look like if it were its own planet?

Probably not…But I did.

Today, I went down to the Arch grounds with the express purpose of making a 360 degree panorama and warping it into a two-dimensional globe. I only had a vague idea of what I was doing.

Just like any panorama, it is best to set your camera on a tripod to get equal and level rotations. I set my Canon EOS 1D Mark II on the tripod and took pictures in a full circle with the camera leveled. I then made a second and a third pass, one with a high angle of view and one with a lower angle.

This was tedious. I had to make sure there was some overlap so the photo stitching would be easier. It wasn’t long before my friend, Gavin, had a better suggestion for capturing the angles.

He recommended putting my camera in full motor drive (8.5 frames per second on my camera) and just spin it quickly while running a circle around the tripod. This worked like a charm capturing at very even and overlapping intervals.

After capturing 89 frames, I rushed home to see my finished product.

I opened Photoshop’s photomerge program and set it to auto. I figured that I could fine tune the problem spots by hand.

An hour later, my straightened 360 panorama was complete.  One step remained. Stretch the image so it is equal in height and width and then run a Polar Coordinates filter on it.

After all that work, I was tremendously disappointed.

Photoshopped version of the 360 panoramic of the St. Louis Arch grounds. Photoshop left sloppy merge lines and caused signifcant distortion. ©Max Gersh 2009

Photoshopped version of the 360 panoramic of the St. Louis Arch grounds. Photoshop left sloppy merge lines and caused significant distortion. ©Max Gersh 2009

That is when I decided to edit it a different way. I had read about a method of 360 photo merging called stereographic projection. In essence, it is a way of wrapping the images without distortion around a circular (almost spherical) plane. That yielded much better results.

Stereographic projection of the 360 panoramic of the St. Louis Arch grounds. All merge lines have vanished and the distortion is so minimal that you can even clearly see my friend sitting on the grass meditating. ©Max Gersh 2009

Stereographic projection of the 360 panoramic of the St. Louis Arch grounds. All merge lines have vanished and the distortion is so minimal that you can even clearly see my friend sitting on the grass meditating. ©Max Gersh 2009

One St. Louis themed Little Planet / Wee Planet / Stereographic Projection down. The rest of the town to go.




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