tristan shu's vr innovations the eye of nagaur scott haefner's kite vr photography tabb firchau's aerialpans by rc helicopter a conversation with tito dupret about his world heritage tour an incredible xrez production an interview with carel struycken and the groninger museum exhibit kite panorama at sziget 2007 by aldo hoeben some images are more equal then others: sziget 2007 new dimension in aviation sports red bull air race abu dhabi 2007 alpine panoramas highlights of swiss photography panogames next gen screenshots 360 parks panoramas as a tool for education squaring the head of hermann redbull xfighters madrid 2006 place–hampi: stereographic panoramas of vijayanagara, india add some height to your panoramas how to make a quicktime vr in 10 minutes immervision's pure player pro for java shooting panos from a gondola in venice new pano2qtvr software for windows users a very, very large zoomify panorama – 2.5 gigapixels mirror image - reflections on single shot vr by pat st. clair bostjan burger - vr photographer at large an update on world heritage traveler and photographer tito dupret standard & poors awards goes virtual a walk around the moscow kremlin by alexey trusov imediatour jook leung talks panoramas on abc’s ‘ahead of the curve’ interview iqtvra summit in sedona update photokina: sep 28-oct 3 in cologne, germany catch the qtbug tour with dennis biela of lightspeed media smithsonian national air and space museum qtvr project new virtual reality site - fullscreenqtvr.com get inside the mercedes-benz slr mclaren! stitcher 4.0 release - an interview with realviz cto luc robert iqtvra washington dc summit vr news the taj mahal – world wonder on the web iqtvra & vrmag join forces in new alliance the quicktiming duo ideum, exploring new frontiers from escher to cubic vrs www.panoramas.hu wgbh interactive the riviera project the making of the zermatt vrscope one, two, 360
krpano the multiresolution panorama flash player henning kramer of x60 about the mk panomachine kaidan's quick pan professional tutorial tools you can use - software autopano pro - just another stitcher ? hardly! using enfuse for night photography the flash panorama player revolution kolor autopano pro - an interview with alexandre jenny review of nodal ninja nn3 and preview of the new nn5 advanced panoramic stitching - a reasoned approach tools you can use: software hydra on location: georgia arounder shoot immervision releases the pure starter toolkit immervision - a company with vision spi-v 1.3 update, one year later tutorial - greenscreen object movie resizable cylindrical panorama flash viewer realviz® announces us digital panorama tour an interview with 360 precision founders: matthew rogers and stuart milne cgibackgrounds provides new venue for vr photographers brian greenstone releases pangeavr 1.0.1 vr based print ad campaign huge printed panorama of the duomo at b.i.t. in milan panoramic photography and image based modeling dvds by greg downing interactive panoramas book by corinna jacobs pleinpot - fullscreen panoramas to web pages made easy new karline rodeon pro vr head realviz releases stitcher express aldo hoeben’s spi-v engine panoscan announces new mk-3 panoramic camera system new kiwi tripod head from kaidan new panorama book featuring laurent thion and gilles vidal vrway partners with multimedia san paolo vrway partners with music label motette ursina for arounder milan case study: production of arounder milan peace river studio's pixorb surveyor catch the qtbug tour with dennis biela of lightspeed media production of the voice commentary for arounder milan the milan duomo cathedral choir and chapel master claudio riva karline rodeon vr head sound bytes - why sound? zoomifyer for flash – free software until end of march peace river studio's pixorb tripod head lens types supported by realviz stitcher using full-frame fisheye images with stitcher™ multinode qtvr tour with embedded flash navigation new software - convert cubic panoramas into video new autostitch panorama software getting viewers to pay for vr content - why not? paying for virtual tours – armchair travel’s experience with micropayments ambient sound for a specific vr ambient sound for city vr tours viewpoint, the new kodak professional pro 14n digital camera high dynamic range imaging, panoscan & spheron case study, tribunal plaza, nice photoshop 7 camera raw format/jpeg 2000 plug-in a new spin on flash object vr parma project: case study 2 parma baptistery and duomo shoot: case study vrscope the wide screen desktop movie
panotools meeting prague jeffrey martin's 360cities viewat org a 360 international project google sponsors the development of open source panorama making software jook leung's 360 degrees workshop in maine 2007 panotools meeting in lucerne switzerland 2007 ivrpa conference in berkeley vr community announcements get pumped for sziget 2006 world wide panorama event - gardens arounder launches a blog as it expands through europe 2006 vr summit in lisbon borders - the march 2006 world wide panorama event world wide panorama - the best of 2005 energy, a world wide panorama event 2005 summit in savannah pic du midi solar eclipse and digital imaging conference call for images for iapp international print exhibit overview of august 2005 panotools meeting in venice ivrpa summit in savannah september 26th - 30th panorama tools photography workshop, venice, august 4-7, 2005 the international association of panoramic photographers (iapp) spin control for novice qtvr users celebrate 2005 new year's events across the globe world wide panorama -sanctuary new world wide panorama event - sanctuary 360 days with mickael therer summit in sedona kicks off bridges - a world wide panorama panorama photography workshop, stuttgart, germany, july 9-11,2004 iqtvra summit in sedona, oct 25-29, 2004 new world wide panorama shoot - june 19-20-21, 2004 panorama seminar in venice, italy an interview with world wide panorama organizers mini virtual tour of boston world wide panorama - a day in the life of 180 photographers inside a wind tunnel: onera's s1ch march 2oth spring equinox , join the worldwide qtvr event an interview with peace river studios world heritage benrath castle in düsseldorf, underwater vr news special discounts on popular photography & stitching products holiday panoramas iqtvra washington dc summit
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guest artist


ERIC POPPLETON, VR PHOTOGRAPHER
by Karen Guthry



Tell me about your work, Eric.

I started out doing photographs of people, commercially doing PR and corporate advertising, then I started making photographs of architecture and in the early nineties I also started teaching. Further to the teaching experience, in 1995 when Apple rolled out Quick Time VR at MacWorld, I saw a very crude demo of what QTVR could be and I started pursuing it because I thought it would be an incredible application to show people like VRWAY where we were going to go on location when we were doing these photographic workshops. So they could tell where they were going to eat or see the location for say, the sunset and all around. So that’s the story, I never intended for it to be a business ,yet here we are.


What sort of technology and equipment do you normally use as part of your work?

In the beginning it was all based on film because there weren’t any digital camera solutions that were good enough. So we started off by shooting in color negative then scanning the images and from there, bringing them into Apple’s application called the Authoring Studio to make QTVR movies. Now as time has gone by technology has changed enormously and there are a lot of great lower end cameras out there that we use in VRWAY to do the street photography for instance, there are also higher end solutions such as the Panoscan, which delivers extremely high resolution and panoramic photography which doesn’t require any stitching.


Before Panoscan appeared on the market the images had to be stitched in Authoring Studio, whereas now, this process is no longer necessary because the Panoscan camera enables you to take 360 degree images?

Actually, to be technical, it’s 390 degree image because there’s a 30 per cent overlap which we eliminate when we bring the whole image into Photoshop to do a blend at the two ends so you can’t tell that there’s a seam.


Why is there a seam?

There’s always a seam because, as time goes by from the beginning of the exposure to the end – except for a studio situation – the lighting will slightly change. So if you budded those two ends together, they’re not going to match, that’s why we blend them. That’s what the guys in the COC department do.


When you are using these cameras you need to take several photos, because each time you have to set the exposure differently according to the lightest and darkest point in order to get the full range of light. Is that correct?

Yes, that’s correct. You need a series of different exposures in order to get detail in the shot and detail in the shadows. If something is close to you and the depth of field is low, some objects may appear out of focus. What you can do is make additional exposures and change the focus plane in order to pull those closer objects into perfect focus. Thad additional piece is added in later in Photoshop.


So that’s why when we look at a Panoscan or a CubicVR everything is in perfect focus, whether it is close or far away?

Exactly.


What exactly is the difference between Panoscans and Cubic VRs?

Well, Panoscans are used to create CubicVRs. You can treat CubicVRs in a variety of ways; much like on this proofsheet here where we used an 8mm Nikon lens, if you happen to have one - it’s a rare lens! We have one and it gives you the ability to make two to four exposures, one at each 180 degree point, or one at each 90 degree point, to create a cubic image that way. You can also use a Kaidan Panoramic Head, which allows you to three rows of photographs: one looking up at a 45 degree angle and do a series of images that way, one that looks straight out in a normal position and you do a series there, and then another series looking down at a 45 degree angle. But that takes an incredible amount of stitching to put the image together. Whereas with the Panoscan you put one lens on - a 16mm, full frame fish-eye – and that enables you to create an image that is 180 degree vertical field of view and 360 degree horizontal field of view in one shot.


Where does the Cubic come in?

Cubic comes in when you play the images back in Apple’s new QuickTime 5 technology, which allows you to look at the whole hemisphere.


What sort of industries use this technology?

Advertising for instance. I did a series on four locations around the world for an agency who wanted to show off their office space to clients. Another application is the hotel industry. EPOP did 105 hotels around the world so people can see exactly what type of accommodation they are booking, what the lobby and pool look like. We arre also seeing uses in the automotive industry. Every major American car manufacturer is now being shot utilizing the Panoscan imaging system, because you can see the whole interior. Real estate is another, where companies are dealing with lower end solutions to provide Cubic and normal Panoramic photography for sales and rentals, which is another great solution. And of course here in VRWAY where we are showing off cities and hopefully going into shops and performing e-commerce.


Are these images meant exclusively for Internet or can they be viewed in print also?

At the beginning of this year there was a Panoramic print above the Ford booth at an L.A. auto show that was probably seven feet by 35 feet, in black and white. It’s incredible! So, as well as the initial representations on the Web, you’ve got print but also, you’ve got broadcast.


Are you saying that in the future we’ll be seeing Qubic VRs on television?

I sure hope so! Here in Webidentity’s R&D department we’ve been experimenting with a new software that allows you to look at a Panoramic image inside of QuickTime and navigate from one point to another, extracting a series of frames that are the correct resolution for television. Then you drop those images into an editing program and pretty soon you’ve got a broadcast, that could be huge!


As far as viewing these images on the Internet, can they only be viewed by people who have access to the latest technology?

Kind of, commercially we are concentrating on QuickTime as a plug-in but there are other applications that allow you to view these over the Web. There are Java-based solutions by Helmet Dersch and Zoomify has a very small plug in as well. So there are other people looking at this area of technology.


What’s so special about QuickTime?

Without needing a lot of memory or incurring into any technical problems, QuickTime enables you to handle some really large resolution files, which have a streaming preview track without having to wait for a large download that might take anywhere between one minute to 20 minutes – depending on your connection, which is a big issue.


How do you ensure the tripod and the photographer aren’t visible in the picture?

Well, if you’re shooting in an analogue situation you’re always behind the camera so that’s easy. With Panoscan you have to watch out because it can travel around in a complete circle and, depending on the resolution you want to capture, from one to 30 minutes. So in the one minute one you have to have your act together or you could get caught in conversation and be right in front of the lens. On the other end of the spectrum, when you’re doing 30 minute Panoscan images in really dark places like the interior of a church for instance, I just lie on the floor and let it spin over the top of me.


But, in a case like that, you still have to edit part of the tripod and yourself out of the picture. This kind of photography requires a great deal of graphic and electronic publishing skills: I presume there are people who specialize in skills such as stitching and cloning?

In the beginning when there wasn’t a whole bunch of people doing this we had to do it ourselves. First we had to learn how to acquire the images. Secondly, we had to bring the images as pict files into the Panoramic itself after stitching them in Photoshop, where for instance we were replacing windows with a different exposure and correcting highlights and fixing details in shadows. Thirdly, we had to learn how to author the files and compress them to the right size for the Web or print applications. Fortunately today there are a number of people who have these skills and are a lot more proficient in Photoshop than I am. These days we hire that part of the work out.


And, also, it saves you a lot of time.

Yes, because the process takes a lot of time and I need to be on the phone getting the next job or the studio is not going to survive.


When you’re not out working you’re traveling, how do potential clients get in touch with you?

Mostly it’s through word of mouth. It’s a small community, I mean there’s only 40 people who own Panoscan cameras in the world and I happen to have the third one of them. So I’ve managed to get some really large jobs and some good experience out on the Web, which is what brought me to VRWAY. But there’s really only a handful of people who can use Panoscan to its full potential and there’s very few studios even though there are 40 cameras sold. It’s an interesting niche market and people are really starting to recognise it.


So no more portraits?

No, I don’t get any stills. It’s amazing, I would have never thought that.




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