| Overview
In this full-color Designer's Notebook, eight expert French
photographers reveal their secrets in using Photoshop and a
collection of dedicated applications to create extraordinary
panoramic photos--including some amazing 360-degree images. For
anyone involved with digital imagery or animation, this
groundbreaking volume demonstrates a new way of thinking about
what's possible and what's required to produce these images.
Originally published in France, Assembling Panoramic Photos: A
Designer's Notebook is available in English for the first time.
Part art book, part how-to guide, this stunning work takes you
right into the studio and sits you down next to renowned digital
artists as they advance step-by-step toward their final images. The
showcased pieces are inspiring and avant-garde, and the techniques
are instructive for a wide range of amateur and professional
photographers, graphic designers, and digital artists. The artists
featured in this Designer's Notebook show how they use Photoshop,
Stitcher, PanaVue ImageAssembler, and other specialized tools to
create high-quality panoramas and wide-angle images from a series
of photos. They also show how to create virtual reality scenes with
Apple's QuickTime VR in conjunction with leading-edge technologies
that support 360-degree one-shot photos, cubic images, and 3D views
of objects. The results are interactive, often startling, and bear
the hallmark of each artist's original vision and skill. Reflecting
the very best of French photography, graphic design and digital
artistry, Assembling Panoramic Photos: A Designer's Notebook
offers advanced Photoshop instruction that goes beyond opening this
menu, or clicking that palette. You receive expert aesthetic
guidance, from start to finish, with notes and views that reveal
every step of the process. This book is a goldmine for any digital
artist who wants to learn new Photoshop techniques and exploit them
for maximum effect. At home on either your coffee table or desktop,
the book itself is dazzling in concept and design. There's nothing
else quite like this Designer's Notebook available in the U.S.
Editorial ReviewsProduct DescriptionIn this full-color Designer's Notebook, eight expert French photographers reveal their secrets in using Photoshop and a collection of dedicated applications to create extraordinary panoramic photos--including some amazing 360-degree images. For anyone involved with digital imagery or animation, this groundbreaking volume demonstrates a new way of thinking about what's possible and what's required to produce these images. Originally published in France, Assembling Panoramic Photos: A Designer's Notebook is available in English for the first time. Part art book, part how-to guide, this stunning work takes you right into the studio and sits you down next to renowned digital artists as they advance step-by-step toward their final images. The showcased pieces are inspiring and avant-garde, and the techniques are instructive for a wide range of amateur and professional photographers, graphic designers, and digital artists. The artists featured in this Designer's Notebook show how they use Photoshop, Stitcher, PanaVue ImageAssembler, and other specialized tools to create high-quality panoramas and wide-angle images from a series of photos. They also show how to create virtual reality scenes with Apple's QuickTime VR in conjunction with leading-edge technologies that support 360-degree one-shot photos, cubic images, and 3D views of objects. The results are interactive, often startling, and bear the hallmark of each artist's original vision and skill. Reflecting the very best of French photography, graphic design and digital artistry, Assembling Panoramic Photos: A Designer's Notebook offers advanced Photoshop instruction that goes beyond opening this menu, or clicking that palette. You receive expert aesthetic guidance, from start to finish, with notes and views that reveal every step of the process. This book is a goldmine for any digital artist who wants to learn new Photoshop techniques and exploit them for maximum effect. At home on either your coffee table or desktop, the book itself is dazzling in concept and design. There's nothing else quite like this Designer's Notebook available in the U.S. |
Top Sellers in This Category | Browse Similar Topics | | Top Level Categories:Sub-Categories: | | |
Reader Reviews From Amazon (Ranked by 'Helpfulness') Average Customer Rating: based on 10 reviews. I found this book to be a great book on artistically making PANORMIC Photos, and More..., 2007-10-06 Reviewer rating: I found this book to be a great book on artistically making PANORMIC Photos, and More...
It is an excellent book in showing different techniques as well as the art of "Assembling" Panoramic pictures. But it is also a work of art in helping you get an idea of the artistic and somewhat abstract way of doing this.
I followed the techniques, for example taking multiple shot of the same subject and then assembling that together, as another example I used the planning that is pointed out in this book, and multiple shots from the same view to make it super high resolution.
I used PhtotoShop for the "Stitching" and I got the same outstanding results.
This is a Great book for photographers.
Bruce Razban
Silicon Valley, CA, USA
| Small but really useful, 2007-02-11 Reviewer rating: This book is small but really comprehensive. Through specific examples people that knows the secret of panoramic photography, gives tips & tricks for a good panoramic photo using normal cameras and lenses.
In the beginning i read it very quick but then i discover more more than even in the smallest paragraph there is a nice tip.
The only "bad" is that most of the writers use realviz stitcher as main stitching program. Why this is "bad"? Because the program costs more than 400 euro. There is also a express release around 100 euro but with limited use.
But the tips and tricks are still there. I personally use PTGui with Pano2cube software and i can use most of this books advices. it is highly recommended for the photographer he wants to involved in panoramic photography. | New photographer, 2005-12-17 Reviewer rating: I came to Moab Utah to take photos of the great national parks and the state park (Dead Horse SP). After two weeks I bought the Really Right Stuff equipment for making horizontal and vertical panoramas. The photoshop CS2 books and the internet suggested that joining them would be easy to do. Hoever, this great book, shows that much more skill is needed in taking the photographs and using the software. The book gives an outline of the steps needed to compose the 8 digital panoramas but does not give exact details because considerable experiment is needed. In the first chapter where 3 images are joined to form an ice fall in an ice cave the photographer took 200 images. In the panoramic beach scene the waves were coninuously moving during the shooting so that an incredible amount of editing was needed to form a great image. This book shows what can be done if skill is used at every step Now I realise how much incredible work Max Lyons had to do to compose his terabyte image of Bryce Canyon. "The Photoshop CS2book for Digital Photographers" has a small chapter on panorams.
For some reason "Assembling Panoramic Photos" is well hidden in the Amazon search terms.
Howard McPherson, Cleveland, Ohio (Moab, Utah) | An essential reference which should be a part of any solid photography book collection, 2005-12-05 Reviewer rating: Few books on photograph go into much detail or depth on handling panorama format photos, which makes the advice of Assembling Panoramic Photos: A Designer's Notebook important. Another feature which lends unique value: leading French photographers and artists present their techniques, translated by William Rodarmor for English readers, with step-by-step examples of technique beginning with initial shots and progressing to specific panoramic techniques. The end result is an essential reference which should be a part of any solid photography book collection.
| Short on details, 2005-11-16 Reviewer rating: A picture may well be worth a thousand words, but 8 pictures doesn't add up to a a book. This book takes the reader through 8 photographs by 8 different photographers who outline the techniques they used to generate them. Although some of the pictures are impressive, this book is a bit short on detail. If you are looking to get started with Panoramic pictures, you'd best start with some other books. |
Some information above was provided using data from Amazon.com. View at Amazon > |
| |
|
|