On a visit to Hinton, Oklahoma, last Saturday, we took some pictures of a large mural downtown. There wasn't too much room to get it all into one clear picture so we shot three different pictures.
Using Adobe Photoshop CS I was able to color balance and stitch the three pictures into one panoramic picture.
You can find instructions on how to stitch pictures together here: Adobe Photoshop CS - Creating panorama images
Well I wanted to create a QTVR out of the panoramic JPG. After a little searching, I discovered this free program: Pano2QTVR for Windows.
I found it very easy to use right out of the box. Well I say that. The first QTVR I created turned out spherical (HintonMural.mov). Oops! The next one I created was correct. (HintonMural1.mov)
This wasn't the first panoramic picture I've done. A few years ago I put together a few others of place around Elk City (Pictures Here | Blog Post). Doing today's was much easier.
Using Adobe Photoshop CS I was able to color balance and stitch the three pictures into one panoramic picture.
You can find instructions on how to stitch pictures together here: Adobe Photoshop CS - Creating panorama images
Well I wanted to create a QTVR out of the panoramic JPG. After a little searching, I discovered this free program: Pano2QTVR for Windows.
I found it very easy to use right out of the box. Well I say that. The first QTVR I created turned out spherical (HintonMural.mov). Oops! The next one I created was correct. (HintonMural1.mov)
This wasn't the first panoramic picture I've done. A few years ago I put together a few others of place around Elk City (Pictures Here | Blog Post). Doing today's was much easier.

