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Panoramic Cameras

Panoramic cameras suitable for photographing panoramas
come in several categories.

Cybershot

panoramic images


digital panorama Starting with a more basic camera, there is the Sony Cybershot. The user simply sweeps the camera across the scene. A burst of images is taken and the camera automatically stitches the scene together. It also works vertically.

There is a choice of formats - 16:9, 32:9, 40:9 and 60:9 when a view of 270 degrees can be covered.
Even moving objects or people are usually taken care of effectively as well.

There are several models, with various megapixels and zoom lenses.
The user has no final control of the image with this camera of course.




Wide View Cameras

image panorama In its simplest form, a panorama can be taken with a very wide-angle lens and then the film can be cropped top and bottom to make a thin letter box format.

To the purest, these are not true panoramas; more an extended wide-angle image.
There are specialist cameras for this format.

6 x 17 is considered the industry standard for such panoramic work. It is also the television wide-screen format.
Several images can be taken with these cameras and then stitch together to make a grand panoramic view.

Fuji Panorama GX617

  • The Fuji Panorama camera uses 120 or 220 film.
  • The panoramas are 6cm x 17cm so you get a large image and superb quality.
  • Interchangeable lenses are 90mm, 105mm, 180mm and 300mm,
    with separate clip-on viewfinders.
  • In spite of its size, the camera is easy to handle and is strong and durable.



panoramic images Hasselblad XPan
  • The XPan is specially designed for wide format.
  • It uses 35mm film and will shoot in two formats - standard 35 mm and panorama format of 24mm x 65mm.
  • Changing from one to the other is by a simple twist of a knob and there is no waste of film between changes.
  • It is a rangefinder camera and therefore is very quiet.
  • Three interchangeable lenses are available with focal lengths of 35mm, 45mm and 90mm.
  • The viewfinder adjusts as the lens and formats are changed.
  • Other features include auto bracketing, auto film transport and multi-exposure option.
  • Hasselblad quality and second-hand prices now.
XPan cameras




Linhof
  • The famous make of Linhof has a range of 3 panoramic cameras.
  • They all take 120 or 220 film.
  • The 612 has an aspect ratio of 2:1 with 58mm and 135mm lenses.
  • The Linhof Technorama 617 is more panoramic with a ratio of 3:1.
  • The excellent Schneider lenses are 72mm, 90mm, 180mm and 250mm focal lengths, and each has its own viewfinder.
  • The body is die-cast and very strong.
  • The 617 also comes as an outdoors version.
  • This version requires no batteries and there is a choice of four colours; perhaps it is mainly meant as a fashion accessory.
Linhof cameras





Swing Lens Cameras

Swing lens cameras hold the film in a curved plane while the lens swings round across the scene; this avoids the image distortion which can happen with the fixed lens super-wide cameras.
These are true panoramic cameras with the lens swinging on its nodal point.


panorama photo Noblex
  • The Noblex has a lens which rotates a full 360 degrees. The first portion is to gather speed and the image covers 145 degrees.
  • The lens is recessed in the revolving drum. It is a strong camera made of aircraft strength aluminium.
  • There are several models in the range for both 35mm and roll films.
  • The 120 cameras have an image size of 6cm x 17cm.
  • The 175 UX model also has a shift lens.
  • There is a large range of filter accessories.
Noblex cameras




Horizon
  • The Russian-made Horizon 202 swing lens camera gives an angle of view of 120 degrees and a film frame size of 24mm x 58mm.
  • Swing lens cameras have the film on a curved plane, thus eliminating distortion.
  • The lens views the scene through a slit. As a result, the exposure is made with the centre of the lens, giving better quality.
  • The built-in spirit level can be seen in the viewfinder.
  • Shutter speeds go from 1/2 to 1/250 second and there is a good range of apertures.
  • Accessories include a pistol grip and three filters. Price is modest.
Horizon cameras




Widelux panoramic images Widelux
  • The Widelux has been around for a long time and although no longer in production, it remains a good second-hand buy.
  • It is a basic swing lens panoramic and produces a wide format image measuring 24 X 60mm on 35mm film.
  • The angle of view is 140 degrees.
  • There is a built-in spirit level.
  • Shutter is mechanical, so no batteries are required.
  • The viewfinder covers the whole angle of view and the lens is fixed-focus.
  • The Model 1500 takes 120 film with an angle of view of 150 degrees.



Widepan
  • The Widepan Pro II will take 120 or 220 film giving an image size of 55mm x 110mm.
  • In fact it is two cameras in one because a 35mm adaptor will give a image size of 24mm x 110mm.
  • The mechanical shutter only has three speeds but the aperture range is good.
  • There is a good set of neutral density and coloured filters, plus the bonus of 3 close-up filters.
Widepan cameras





Rotating Cameras

With rotating cameras, the camera rotates while the film rotates
in the opposite direction.
They might go to 360 degrees or even more.
Now we are getting panoramas on steroids.


Globuscope panorama 360 Globuscope 360

The Globuscope 360 is of modern compact design.
It is fairly light and can be comfortably hand-held.
Taking 35mm it has a 25mm wide-angle lens.
Rotation speed is just one second.

The Globuscope cameras are no longer made but a good second deal might be found.




Roundshot panoramas Roundshot

The Roundshot range is Swiss-made. They make digital panorama cameras, stitching software and accessories for using others cameras for taking panoramic pictures.

The software is 32 Bit High Dynamic Range.

Their equipment can be used for virtual tours, full 360 degree images, street mapping, aerial images and video. In fact, for every form of panorama imaging.

They claim to make the world's fastest producing 470 million pixels in 3 seconds. Roundshot also make the only digital 6 x 17 cameras.

Roundshot cameras




panorama cameras Hulcherama

Hulcher make a reknown 35mm rapid sequence camera, and the Hulcherama comes from this stable.

Using 120 and 220 film it takes the full 360 degrees.
With a choice of lenses, exposure is controlled by the size of the viewing slit and the speed of the rotation.

Hulcher cameras






Kaidan panoramic cameras Kaidan 360

The Kaidan 360 One VR is one of new breed of digital panorama cameras, although this unit is an accessory rather than an actual camera.
It is an optical unit which will attach to a large range of digital cameras.
The Kaidan views the full panorama and the camera photographs it as a doughnut shaped image.
The system's own software, PhotoWrap, unwraps the image to a standard panorama which can be played on QuickTime VR and others.
The price is modest compared with many cameras and a good way to take digital panos.

Kaidan cameras




Whereas many of the above cameras might be manageable for a lot of people, the next two will be out of most price ranges; really only for professionals whose use of them can justify the expense.


Panoscan panoramas Panoscan

The Panoscan digital panorama camera gives a high quality full 360 degrees image with no stitching.
They can be viewed as full panos or as virtual reality movies.
Lenses are the Mamiya 645.
The system and software are designed with BetterLight, makers of high-end scanning cameras.
The Panoscan will also take infra-red and ultra-violet images - and burn a hole in your pocket.

Panoscan cameras




Spheron panoramics Spherocam

The Spherocam is another of the new quality digital panoramics.
The camera rotates on an axis and everything is controlled by the notebook computer it must be attached to.
No stiching necessary, nor any distortion or colour aberations, just a good 48 bit file to work on.

Spheron cameras



These rotating cameras produce excellent results with the minimum of fuss. One of them is likely to be an ideal choice for anyone serious about panoramas. Well designed, hand-built, precision engineering, small production runs all mean a high price. This puts some of them in the professional category or rich people's toys.



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