From the course: Shooting and Processing Panoramas
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Merging a 360-degree panoramic photo
From the course: Shooting and Processing Panoramas
Merging a 360-degree panoramic photo
at one of my favorite styles of panoramic photography: for 3D animation. Maybe in After Effects to put a little bit of a tint Multimedia folks use it, and we're seeing a resurgence in things In any case, a 360 degree panorama is very cool. and then we'll take a look outside of the Adobe suite The use of VR material letting them explore an area virtually, that they may not be able to go to. I've included an action to help you put this together. And what we want to do here, is merge these together. And there are many different ways to do this. If you take a look here, If you take a look here, you'll see that we have the JPEG files, and there are several overlapping images here. If doing a 360, it's important to ensure quite a bit of overlap between each image. quite a bit of overlap between each image. Now, I'm going to work with the JPEGs. These are a little bit smaller, These are a little bit smaller, and should behave more quickly. And what we'll do is…
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Initiating the Photomerge command from Bridge1m 11s
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Initiating the Photomerge command from Photoshop1m 21s
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Choosing an alignment method1m 33s
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Compensating for lens distortion5m 4s
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Blending the photos3m 24s
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Post merge cleanup3m 8s
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Using the Adaptive Wide Angle filter to remove distortion2m 59s
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Merging a 360-degree panoramic photo7m 19s
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Cleaning up VR images in Photoshop3m 23s
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Merging the GigaPan panoramic photo6m 27s
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Using Photoshop filters to enhance panoramas5m 32s
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