Solutions for 360 degree photography?

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Whaat
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Solutions for 360 degree photography?

Post by Whaat » Sun Jul 18, 2010 5:48 am

What is the best solution (in terms of cost vs. quality) for creating 360 degree photography for creating environment maps?

Has anyone used the 0-360 system? It seems like a decent solution.

http://www.0-360.com/

Thanks.

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Doug Armand
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Re: Solutions for 360 degree photography?

Post by Doug Armand » Sun Jul 18, 2010 6:18 am

Cheapest solution is to use a wide angle lens and your feet! :) :o

Just rotate yourself and click - leaving around 25% overlap between frames. How wide your lens is will determine how many frames you need. Better results if done on a tripod :wink:

These days pano software is so good that you rarely need those dedicated bits of gear - PShop CS4 and up is especially good at stitching pano's
Doug

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CTZn
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Re: Solutions for 360 degree photography?

Post by CTZn » Mon Jul 19, 2010 2:46 am

this 0-360 thingy will leave 35% of the vertical field uncaptured. Not a good option if you are after full-blown environments.
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galinette
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Re: Solutions for 360 degree photography?

Post by galinette » Mon Jul 19, 2010 9:23 am

The best stitching software is in my opinion PTGui. It is EXTREMELY powerful:
- Auto control point creation & alignment
- Correction of lens distortion
- Fully HDR compatible
- Able to export HDRI envmaps as well as any kind of panorama, qtvr, cubemaps...
- Able to calculate "point of view shift" for nadir images
- Etc...

Maybe too powerful for envmaps...

Then, depending on the level of perfectness you want, you can take the pictures "handheld", on a tripod, or on a tripod+panoramic head.

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Re: Solutions for 360 degree photography?

Post by dougal2 » Tue Jul 20, 2010 12:56 am

I've created 360 deg HDRI images using:
- DSLR
- 16mm Fisheye lens
- tripod
- Manfrotto 303SPH (http://www.google.co.uk/images?hl=en&q= ... a=N&tab=wi)
- Hugin stitching software (http://hugin.sourceforge.net/)
- Quite a lot of patience

I did write up a bit of a tutorial on my site here: http://hdri.uk.to/v/how_to

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Whaat
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Re: Solutions for 360 degree photography?

Post by Whaat » Tue Jul 20, 2010 5:08 pm

dougal2 wrote: - Quite a lot of patience
This is what I have the biggest problem with. :lol: Can you recommend any one-shot solution that is even remotely affordable for the average consumer?

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CTZn
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Re: Solutions for 360 degree photography?

Post by CTZn » Tue Jul 20, 2010 5:37 pm

One probe, one hdr camera, one shot, one crop and done (you've got the wife already ?) ?

Image

image taken from http://www.pearsonfaces.com/fpsurgeon/labels/HDRI.html

Sorry Doug, you're the one ;)
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galinette
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Re: Solutions for 360 degree photography?

Post by galinette » Tue Jul 20, 2010 8:46 pm

PTGui is 79€ (but for HDR and nadir point-of-view-shift you need the pro, 149€)

However, you can give it a try, it just adds watermarks.
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dougal2
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Re: Solutions for 360 degree photography?

Post by dougal2 » Tue Jul 20, 2010 10:00 pm

CTZn wrote:One probe, one hdr camera, one shot, one crop and done (you've got the wife already ?) ?

Image

image taken from http://www.pearsonfaces.com/fpsurgeon/labels/HDRI.html

Sorry Doug, you're the one ;)
I know this method is used a lot, but I personally have issues with it. I'm pretty sure that the reflection captured in the sphere does not cover the full 360 degrees, also most of the 'behind' information is compressed into the very edges of the sphere and hence you'll lose resolution in those areas.

Basically, what I'm saying is that I can't see how this method adequately 'samples' the scene behind the sphere. Resolution to the front, however would be acceptable.

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Re: Solutions for 360 degree photography?

Post by dougal2 » Tue Jul 20, 2010 11:32 pm

dougal2 wrote:
CTZn wrote:One probe, one hdr camera, one shot, one crop and done (you've got the wife already ?) ?

Image

image taken from http://www.pearsonfaces.com/fpsurgeon/labels/HDRI.html

Sorry Doug, you're the one ;)
I know this method is used a lot, but I personally have issues with it. I'm pretty sure that the reflection captured in the sphere does not cover the full 360 degrees, also most of the 'behind' information is compressed into the very edges of the sphere and hence you'll lose resolution in those areas.

Basically, what I'm saying is that I can't see how this method adequately 'samples' the scene behind the sphere. Resolution to the front, however would be acceptable.
You can apparrently solve this problem by taking 2 pictures of a chrome sphere, 90 degrees apart: http://gl.ict.usc.edu/HDRShop/tutorial/tutorial5.html

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Whaat
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Re: Solutions for 360 degree photography?

Post by Whaat » Sun Jul 25, 2010 3:21 pm

Thanks for the info, guys.

Is it possible to get adequate resolution for an environment map by using a 3" precision chrome sphere? It definitely seems like a much quicker and easier method but i am doubtful of the results. Does anyone have experience with the chrome sphere method?

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CTZn
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Re: Solutions for 360 degree photography?

Post by CTZn » Wed Jul 20, 2011 2:35 pm

Sorry for dusting, and perhaps for the obvious hint but I found this page potentially usefull if you are getting involved into the matter:

HDRLabs Tutorial page
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pixie
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Re: Solutions for 360 degree photography?

Post by pixie » Wed Jul 20, 2011 6:39 pm

CTZn wrote:One probe, one hdr camera, one shot, one crop and done (you've got the wife already ?) ?

Image

image taken from http://www.pearsonfaces.com/fpsurgeon/labels/HDRI.html

Sorry Doug, you're the one ;)
LOL!

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Re: Solutions for 360 degree photography?

Post by lesiamert » Mon Dec 23, 2013 7:41 pm

Doug Armand wrote:Cheapest solution is to use a wide angle lens and your feet! :) :o

Just rotate yourself and click - leaving around 25% overlap between frames. How wide your lens is will determine how many frames you need. Better results if done on a tripod :wink:

These days pano software is so good that you rarely need those dedicated bits of gear - PShop CS4 and up is especially good at stitching pano's
I completely agree with you if we capture photos with moving lens we cant get better results...I am a wedding photographer and i know this is a good thing for photographers

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