Ground Zero Skyline Panorama
This was taken from a conference room window overlooking the World Trade Center site.
19-Jul-2008
Mouth of the Hudson
This was taken from the tugboat Cornell as I cruised New York Harbor. Jersey City
is to the left and lower Manhattan is to the right.
19-Jul-2008
Cornell Panorama
This is the tugboat Cornell. I shot the picture on a trip to visit the old
car floats on the Hudson and the East Rivers where freight cars were put on
barges and floated across the rivers.
This was originally four pictures taken in portrait mode (vertically). They
needed to be combined in two steps because I didn't use a tripod and stitching
all four at once didn't work as well. I stitched the two pictures across the
top and then the two across the bottom. I then stitched the two results into
the final picture. It required some tweaking in Photoshop but those tweaks were
small. I am still amazed that I can do this without a tripod.
19-Jul-2008
Ellis Island Panorama
Taken from the tugboat Cornell on a cruise in New York Harbor.
19-JUL-2008
Lower Manhattan Panorama
Taken from the tugboat Cornell during a cruise around New York Harbor.
23-Feb-2007
Ridge Yard
This is the yard at Ridge Live Steamers in Dundee, Florida.
04-Sep-2004
Union Station, Selma, North Carolina
27-Oct-2000
Seaworld Rides Panorama
This is one of my first panoramas. It was taken from the observation tower
at Seaworld in Florida. You can see the shadow of the tower in the middle
of the picture. It was this panorama that sold me on PanaVue. The observation
deck rotates around the tower as it rises and drops. Two pictures were taken
without thought of stitching them together. When I tried the demo of PanaVue
Image Assembler, I had to work hard to stitch these pictures but it worked.
28-Oct-2000
Poseidon's Fury
This doesn't look like a panorama but it is actually two pictures
taken vertically. There were two advantages to shooing this as a
panorama. First, I couldn't step back any further and I couldn't
fit the whole shot in with the lense I was using. Second, using two
pictures increased the amount of detail I could get in the final
picture.