28 May 2019

PLANET PROCESS

DIRECTIONS: TAKE YOUR PHOTOS IN A WIDE-OPEN SPACE (FIELD, PARKING LOT, ETC.)  THE CLOSER YOU ARE TO BUILDINGS/TREES/ETC., THE HARDER IT WILL BE FOR YOU TO PATCH/FIX THE EMPTY PARTS OF THE PLANET. 
DO NOT PHOTOGRAPH INDOORS UNLESS YOU WANT A MASSIVE CHALLENGE THAT YOU WON'T HAVE TIME TO PATCH/FIX.

STEP 1
Select/Highlight the appropriate images in the content window in Bridge.

STEP 2
With all appropriate images selected in Bridge, go to TOOLS + PHOTOSHOP + PHOTOMERGE.
This will begin the process of stitching together all the photos.

STEP 3
Make sure “Blend Images Together” is checked.
Make sure you can see .jpg files listed in the “Source Files” column.  Click “OK.”

STEP 4
If you have correctly overlapped the taking of the photos, Photoshop will be able to create the panorama. If you have not photographed correctly, the resulted image will be fragmented.

A.    Once the blending process is complete, you should have a left-to-right panorama like this:

B. Flatten all the layers in the Layers palette.

C.  Now, crop each side to the point where they will line-up when joined together:

STEP 5
“SQUARE” the image (IMAGE + IMAGE SIZE + make the dimensions square)

This will distort the image like this:


STEP 6
Flip the image 180° upside-down (IMAGE + IMAGE ROTATION + 180°)

      

STEP 7
Create the planet. (FILTER + DISTORT + POLAR COORDINATES)

      

STEP 8
Now that your planet is created, the patching can begin.

Use tools (CLONE STAMP, CUT/PASTE from texture images, etc.) to cover empty areas, extend sky/ground to the edges of the composition, etc.

For TRANSFORMING and “curving” elements, use the “WARP” function to bend elements together.
(EDIT + TRANSFORM + WARP)



PROJECT #15: STEREOGRAPHIC PLANET

DIRECTIONS.

Bring back (next class) THREE BATCHES of photographs for THREE DIFFERENT stereographic planet assemblages. 

Note: each must be in a distinctly different place/setting...and nothing indoors.


**Do not photograph indoors.





THINK: Imagine you are standing at the exact center of this sphere. You need to pivot your head and camera to take slightly overlapping images so that you have a photo of each of the areas in the grid.





LINKS:
CLICK HERE for directions how to do this project in both Photoshop & Gimp.
A BUNCH of links about stereographic planets. CLICK HERE.
Panoplanet. CLICK HERE.
A Flickr page with photos. CLICK HERE.
Create your own planets photo pool. CLICK HERE.
Wee Photos CLICK HERE.
Little planets by Clement Celma.

EXAMPLES: