*The R10 with fixed tilt has been discontinued and replaced by R20. The R series uses lens rings that allow the lenses (not bodies) to be mounted on the panohead. Taking that logic one step further, it is possible to shoot a fully spherical 360 photo with just 4 shots from a circular fisheye or a cropped circular fisheye, using a single-row panoramic head, such as the ring mount Nodal Ninja R series (R1, R10*, and R20). In that tutorial, I mentioned that for virtual tours, fisheye lenses tend to be more popular because they require fewer shots, which not only saves time, but also means there is less chance for stitching errors. Last week, I posted a tutorial for shooting with a multi-row panoramic head. Multi-Row Panoramic head – advantages and disadvantages Nodal Ninja R Lens compatibility and Lens buying guide For this tutorial, I invited an esteemed guest: Peter Van den Wyngaert (LittlePlanet.be), who won 1st prize at 360 Cities’ Panoramic Video of the Year, and also won the grand prize at IVRPA’s Street View Challenge 2018. However, there is a faster and easier way to shoot panoramas with a DSLR - using a ring mount panoramic head, such as the Nodal Ninja R Series. Below you will find 3 HTML references of past projects.360 photos shot with a DSLR and a panoramic head have much higher quality than typical 360 cameras, but they also take more time to shoot. We will announce in the next days when we will release a first beta version and what effects the HTML Exporter will have on the pricing model. The news that Kolors virtual tour software Panotour and Pano Tour Pro were discontinued on causes us to push the HTML topic more strongly.
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