I love taking photos. I also love sharing the photos I’ve taken. If you haven’t already, you should swing by my Flickr page and take a look around.
Yes, I know I’m shamelessly promoting my work, but hey, that’s what blogs are for, right?
I love taking photos. I also love sharing the photos I’ve taken. If you haven’t already, you should swing by my Flickr page and take a look around.
Yes, I know I’m shamelessly promoting my work, but hey, that’s what blogs are for, right?
Because I can’t keep from messing around with stuff constantly, I’ve created a photoblog here on my website. It’s not (yet) easily accessible from this blog, but you can click on that link to go visit. I’m posting about one picture a day, but I already have a few up. Again, I’m not quite sure why I’m doing this. I guess it’s just because I can (and because more people visit this blog than my Flickr or DeviantART accounts).
Recently, I came across a rather amazing little program called AutoStitch, which is developed by the University of British Columbia up in Canada. It’s a fully automatic program for stitching together a group of stills into one large panorama. The version offered on their website is only a demo, but even so, it works very well. To demonstrate, I took a few pictures of Red Square here on the University of Washington campus and put them into the program. The finished product is pretty amazing. It’s also evidence that ghosts exist (just kidding: any ghosting you see is the result of people moving between pictures).
Hit the read link to view the original pictures and the finished product.