Raw Recovery with ‘Oloneo Photo Engine’

Yesterday I presented a somewhat older panoramic image from 2006. Usually I don’t need that much time to reach a result which matches my vision. My standard workflow for panoramic images starts with loading all the files in the raw converter. I choose a common white balance for all images and unify exposure, shadows, and other parameters which have to be identical among every source image. After stitching I got the following result:

Castle Rock near Lynton (Devon, England)
Only global exposure set in raw converter

I was really disappointed. In my imagination the view just was stunning. But what I saw on the screen was really dull and boring. I tried to achieve a better result with adding masks and doing some dodging and burning, but I didn’t reach my goal of a spectacular image. So I left the files on the harddisk and they were buried in oblivion.

Recently I purchased Olonoe Photo Engine in order to use it for my high dynamic range workflow of spherical panoramas. Independently of that fact, I was recently crawling through the sphericals of our website and I stumbled upon the panorama PanoTwin Jürgen shooting Castle Rock. So I browsed my database for the images and found the long forgotten files of Castle Rock on my hardddisk. Immediately I realised that this image is a good candidate for the mode ‘raw recovery’ of Olonoe Photo Engine. So here is the result after playing a bit with the parameters:

Castle Rock near Lynton (Devon, England)
Raw recovery applied in Oloneo Photo Engine

So I choose the ‘raw recovered’ image as new base image of my tweaks. Again I applied some dodging and burning, but now the image matched my vision when I was standing at the coast of Lynton and looking towards Castle Rock. And this is the final result:

Castle Rock near Lynton (Devon, England)
Final image after tweaking in Photoshop

As Olonoe Photo Engine is capable of processing TIFF images with a bit depth of 16bit, be sure to start your panoramic imagery with images in RAW mode of your camera. And for best results stick to a full 16bit workflow.

Geotag Icon Show on map

Castle Rock near Lynton (Devon, England)

Nearly six years ago we’ve been at the Panotools-Meeting in Bath. After the sessions we toured the south-west of England four another two weeks. And while taking a little hike near Lynton I took this panorama. And finally today I consider this image as completely post-processed 🙂

Castle Rock near Lynton (Devon, England)
Final image after tweaking in Photoshop

Panotwin Markus made a spherical while I was shooting a mosaic of this view. Back in 2006 I used a Konica Minolta Dynax 7D which had 6 Megapixel. As the shot was hand-held and I wanted to make sure not to forget some portions of the view, I chose an overlap of approximately 50%. So I ended up with 20 images (4 columns with 5 rows in landscape orientation). The final panorama has a resolution of only 42 Megapixel. But hey, this was nearly six years ago!

Geotag Icon Show on map

White Easter in Bad Hindelang

Some impressions of Bad Hindelang on Easter Sunday. Over night fell about 10cm new snow. Between the clouds started to show some blue inbetween. This was just a quick handheld cylindrical I shot to capture the scenery. I took 6 portrait oriented images and stiched them.

White Easter in Bad Hindelang 2012
White Easter in Bad Hindelang 2012

Geotag Icon Show on map


Reprojected Oktoberfest like Bavaria sees it

This stereographic reprojection shows the Oktoberfest from the Bavaria statue. The original panorama has been made from inside the head of Bavaria. Bavaria is a hollow bronze statue that can be ascended in the inside. It is located next to the Theresienwiese, where the famous Oktoberfest takes place since more than 200 years. See the original panorama here.

Reprojected Oktoberfest like Bavaria sees it
Reprojected Oktoberfest like Bavaria sees it

Geotag Icon Show on map

Oktoberfest with Tilt-Shift effects

Some months ago I stumbled across a post on Sonyalpha Rumors. The Lensbaby Tilt Transformer with the possibility to mount the Lensbaby Composer Focus Front or Nikon lenses on it. The local photography store had it in stock and I bought it right away! First without a Nikon lens, but shortly afterwards I bought two of them. You see the results in the following images.

Oktoberfest Tilt-Shift Effect @ 24mm
Oktoberfest Tilt-Shift Effect @ 24mm

See additional information for this Nikon lens on the Sony NEX camera line in this post.

Oktoberfest Tilt-Shift Effect @ 50mm
Oktoberfest Tilt-Shift Effect @ 50mm

See additional information for this Nikon lens on the Sony NEX camera line in this post.

Oktoberfest Lensbaby Effect
Oktoberfest Lensbaby Effect
Geotag Icon Show on map

Bad Hindelang with Tilt-Shift effects

Some months ago I stumbled across a post on Sonyalpha Rumors. The Lensbaby Tilt Transformer with the possibility to mount the Lensbaby Composer Focus Front or Nikon lenses on it. The local photography store had it in stock and I bought it right away! First without a Nikon lens, but shortly afterwards I bought two of them. You see the results in the following images.

Bad Hindelang with a Tilt-Shift Effect @ 24mm taken with a Nikon lens on the Lensbaby Tilt Transformer
Bad Hindelang with a Tilt-Shift Effect @ 24mm taken with a Nikon lens on the Lensbaby Tilt Transformer

See additional information for this Nikon lens on the Sony NEX camera line in this post.

Bad Hindelang Tilt-Shift Effect @ 50mm taken with a Nikon lens on the Lensbaby Tilt Transformer
Bad Hindelang Tilt-Shift Effect @ 50mm taken with a Nikon lens on the Lensbaby Tilt Transformer

See additional information for this Nikon lens on the Sony NEX camera line in this post.

Bad Hindelang Lensbaby Effect taken with the Lensbaby Composer Focus Front
Bad Hindelang Lensbaby Effect taken with the Lensbaby Composer Focus Front
Geotag Icon Show on map

Bad Hindelang seen from Nusche

This panorama shows Bad Hindelang from the viewpoint Nusche, that’s just halfway to the urban district of Gailenberg. It is a sort of an experiment because it is one of my first hand held shots with the Sony NEX-5 camera using the 16mm pancake lens and the fisheye converter. I took eight pictures around, two zenith and two nadir shots. I took eight images, because with only a Philopod setup this is easier to shoot than only six shots around, which would give you enough overlap for the lens combination. The original equirectangular image had a size of 12000×6000 pixels.
[pano file=”https://www.panotwins.de/wp-content/panos/MMatern_20111002_5810_NuscheZwischenKastanienHerbst.xml” preview=”https://www.panotwins.de/wp-content/panos/MMatern_20111002_5810_NuscheZwischenKastanienHerbst.jpg”]
Geotag Icon Show on map

Oktoberfest like Bavaria sees it

This panorama has been made from inside the head of Bavaria. Bavaria is a hollow bronze statue that can be ascended in the inside. It is located next to the Theresienwiese, where the famous Oktoberfest takes place since more than 200 years.

[pano file=”https://www.panotwins.de/wp-content/panos/MMatern_20110926_4827_BavariaKopf.xml” preview=”https://www.panotwins.de/wp-content/panos/MMatern_20110926_4827_BavariaKopf.jpg”]
Geotag Icon Show on map

QR Code Business Card