http://www.utah3d.net/
This web site has a number of beautiful panoramic photos of the
natural Utah landscape. Well worth a few minutes to view!
The "about the photographer" section shows a photo of a camera
with very wide angle lens on a tripod with degree wheel, so I think
the panoramas were created the original way, stitching a great number
of individual photos together into a large image. The photographer
doesn't say what hardware or software is used.
The alternative is to use a cone with a mirror surface. The camera
sits below the cone, pointing upwards. (Think of a camera pointing up
at the bottom of an ice cream cone.) The camera can capture a 360*
view with a single shot. Special software translates the resulting
circular image into a rectangular one for presentation.
Here's an example: http://www.eggsolution.com/new/product/egglens.html
This web site has a number of beautiful panoramic photos of the
natural Utah landscape. Well worth a few minutes to view!
The "about the photographer" section shows a photo of a camera
with very wide angle lens on a tripod with degree wheel, so I think
the panoramas were created the original way, stitching a great number
of individual photos together into a large image. The photographer
doesn't say what hardware or software is used.
The alternative is to use a cone with a mirror surface. The camera
sits below the cone, pointing upwards. (Think of a camera pointing up
at the bottom of an ice cream cone.) The camera can capture a 360*
view with a single shot. Special software translates the resulting
circular image into a rectangular one for presentation.
Here's an example: http://www.eggsolution.com/new/product/egglens.html