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bridge in Valle Quarazza
Piedmont

my bridge panoramas have improved quite a bit since I'm using my improved philopod technique to position the no-parallax-point, see:

https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/hugin-ptx/I6rhafCZmMY

I've been using this technique for some two years now, and I don't want to do without it any more. While I thought my panoramas done from the top of one of my Leki sticks were pretty good, I had to admit that adopting the new technique made them much better - at almost no extra weight; the device is living in an ex playing-card box, wound up around a plastic card, and I use my GPS device as the ground target, oriented to magnetic north with the built-in magnet flux compass, so I can orient the panorama before I even upload it to 360cities.

While previously I had to retouch every bridge panorama I did, do some finessing with the CPs or just live with the visible parallactic errors, I can now confidently just stitch the thing and have remaining errors which are too small to bother me, just like in this panorama. The banister does, of course, pose a challenge, since it's so close-by, and there is plenty of background, pulling the SIFT algorithm towards a population of CPs from the background. If, then, the foreground (the bridge) is off, parallactically speaking, a match of the foreground elements is quite impossible and the blending is bound to contain artifacts.

I estimate that my improved philopod technique limits my movements of the NPP to a few centimetres (if it's not too windy), which is good enough for most landscapes.

Copyright: Kay F. Jahnke
Type: Spherical
Resolution: 6000x3000
Taken: 14/08/2014
Uploaded: 20/08/2014
Views:

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Tags: bridge; stream; mountains; alps; trekking; outdoors
More About Piedmont

The name Piedmont comes from medieval Latin Pedemontium, i. e. "ad pedem montium", meaning "at the foot of the mountains": Piedmont, whose capital is Turin, is surrounded on three sides by the Alps, including Monviso, where Po river rises, and Monte Rosa. It borders France, Switzerland and the Italian regions of Aosta Valley, Lombardy, Liguria and Emilia Romagna. Its history was linked for centuries to Savoy dynasty: since 1046 Piedmont was part of County of Savoy, raised to Duchy of Savoy in 1416, evolved in the eighteenth century into the Kingdom of Piedmont-Sardinia. The role of Piedmont for Italy's unification is comparable to the role of Prussia for Germany and his army was the engine of the unification process, ended with the creation of the Kingdom of Italy in 1861. The presence of Savoy in its territory bequeathed a large number of castles and residences. Lowland Piedmont is a fertile agricultural region, producing wheat, rice and maize and is one of the great winegrowing areas in Italy. The region contains major industrial centres: FIAT automobile plants in Turin, Ferrero's chocolate factories in Alba, tissue and silk manufactories in Biella, in Ivrea Olivetti was an important technology center, publishing in Turin and Novara.


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