Alan...
That pano of NY city is great. I love the color in it.
Thanks!
I live in NY
but have never thought about doing panos before. Your ability to
turn out such a nice one without special equipment or software
expertise in this area has inspired me to perhaps try a few myself.
Well actually I think this results speak more to the abilities of
the software than my abilities -- indeed all of the pano packages I
experimented with produce amazing results with very little effort.
One other thing about Pano Factory (I'm not sure -- they may all do
this) is that I was able to enter a specific focal length. Since I
was partially zoomed in those shots, PixMaker (free version) failed
miserably with its assumed 35mm FL. Maybe their full version
allows a user entered FL, I don't know.
One question. You didn't use a tripod, did you? Do you know if they
sell reasonably priced tripods that already come with the pano
heads?
I
did use a tripod. I've seen samples of panos done without a
tripod, and it is possible to get decent results hand-holding the
camera, but you'll get better results with a tripod (and accurately
level the camera!), and even better results with a pano head. I'm
not aware of any low-cost pano heads, but that doesn't mean they
don't exist.
BTW, I think the location of the tripod mount on the camera has a
lot to do with the the results you can achieve without a pano head.
On the F505V, the tripod mount is on the axis of the lens (and also
near its nodal point I believe) which improves the situation. If
the mount is off-axis, you'll have more parallax for the stitching
software to try and deal with.