Teach you how to take and create panoramic photos
I wonder if you all have this feeling: sometimes a large landscape that looks very beautiful is far less beautiful to the naked eye when you take it with a digital camera and then appreciate it. It looks so beautiful. The reason is that color reproduction accounts for a large part. Another reason is that the field of view shown in photos taken by digital cameras is relatively narrow, and when we usually use our eyes to appreciate the scenery, the visual range can reach up to 180 degrees. Therefore, when we use a digital camera to capture a landscape, it is often only a limited part of the landscape we see with our eyes. Even with a wide-angle camera, sometimes it still cannot achieve the coherent and long-lasting effect we want. Since the camera can’t do it, we have to use software post-production.
What I recommend here is the panoramic photo production function in photoshop cs.
Before production, we need a set of photos. This set of photos is the various parts that you want to stitch into a panoramic photo. When taking this set of photos, try to use a tripod to rotate the camera, so that the The scenery in the photo is all from the same angle, making it easier to post-process the photos. Secondly, you should pay attention to the overlap between the photos taken as much as possible to facilitate the identification and stitching of the software. By paying attention to the two basic rules, the photos we take can be used for post-production.
The following are four random photos I took to prepare for stitching panoramas:
Then open photoshop cs, open file-automatic-photomerge, and then select the pictures you want to splice. Be careful not to have too many pictures, otherwise the clarity will be greatly reduced after processing. Spend. After confirming that it is correct, click “OK” with the mouse, and PS will automatically start processing, and we can easily get a panoramic photo:
How about it, is it very simple? If you take it carefully, I believe you can make a beautiful panorama.
We will teach you the simple ones, and you will share the profound ones
<!–Collectio