Your Ad Here

How to photograph a 300 ft tall tree without getting a splinter

National Geographic magazine is running an article about the redwood forest this month, and part of that article included a very special vertical panoramic shot of a 300 foot tall tree. Shooting in the redwoods is particularly difficult because you lose the sense of scale. If there’s not something like a house or a bus next to the tree, you really can’t show how massive the trees really are.

Photographer Nick Nichols traveled out into the forest to do just that: capture a photo of a tree that’s over 300 feet tall, while keeping a sense of scale. Standard photographic techniques just wouldn’t cut it, so Nick had to get creative.

What the photographer ended up doing was building a custom rig containing 3 cameras, each one taking a slightly different shot: one to the left, one to the right, and one on the dead center. The rig was mounted to a gyroscope, and then the cameras took a series of pictures as the rig was lowered to the ground.

The end result: a vertical panorama comprised of 84 pictures, all stitched together to create one of the most complete pictures of a redwood tree we’ve ever seen. Check it out:

[via Hackaday]



  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • email
  • PDF
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Google Bookmarks
  • RSS

This post is tagged: ,

Leave a Reply





  • Ainovo Novo 7 Basic reviewAinovo Novo 7 Basic review

    It's a world's first coming from an organization you've never heard of -- when you live outside of China, anyway. Taking Google's newly minted OS and slipping it into a reasonable chassis, Ainovo's Novo 7 Basic could all right be a sleeper hit a number of the tech-obsessed masses. Sure, it could lack the emblem equity and tidy content ecosystems which are part and parcel of Amazon and… »
  • Bowers and Wilkins refreshes M-1 speaker and PV1D subwoofer, new Mini Theater bundles coming soonBowers and Wilkins refreshes M-1 speaker and PV1D subwoofer, new Mini Theater bundles coming soon

    B&W will soon have something new for each corner of your media consumption shrine. The six-year-old M-1 compact monitor is getting improved drivers, offering "enhanced full-range performance," while the PV1D subwoofer benefits from a more complete redesign. It now boasts the identical digital platform because the flagship DB1, a brand new OLED display and other fresh specs including a… »

Categories

Subscribe

Enter your email address: