#photography #filmphotography #retrobosak
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@bosak Very cool. If you frame it right, you can turn this into a short panning video.

@metin I'll leave that up to Ken Burns!
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#photography #filmphotography #retrobosak
Roll 1969park05: Berkeley (May 30, 1969)
This panorama was taken on 12 frames stitched together in Photoshop. The fact that I took the set as a panorama and then held on to the negatives for half a century until technology made it possible to render this image is so cool that I'm just going to leave this out here by itself for a day to let you all dig it.

@bosak hey, I have that truck!
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#photography #filmphotography #retrobosak
Roll 1969park05: Berkeley (May 30, 1969)
This panorama was taken on 12 frames stitched together in Photoshop. The fact that I took the set as a panorama and then held on to the negatives for half a century until technology made it possible to render this image is so cool that I'm just going to leave this out here by itself for a day to let you all dig it.

@bosak Amazing!
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#photography #filmphotography #retrobosak
Roll 1969park05: Berkeley (May 30, 1969)
This panorama was taken on 12 frames stitched together in Photoshop. The fact that I took the set as a panorama and then held on to the negatives for half a century until technology made it possible to render this image is so cool that I'm just going to leave this out here by itself for a day to let you all dig it.

@bosak That's very cool. I think we can make a Gaussian Splat from that with some new tools from Apple so it's more of a 3D model... want me to give it a whirl?
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@bosak That's very cool. I think we can make a Gaussian Splat from that with some new tools from Apple so it's more of a 3D model... want me to give it a whirl?
@Spencerlindsay Sure! I'll be interested to see what you can make of it.
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#photography #filmphotography #retrobosak
Roll 1969park05: Berkeley (May 30, 1969)
This panorama was taken on 12 frames stitched together in Photoshop. The fact that I took the set as a panorama and then held on to the negatives for half a century until technology made it possible to render this image is so cool that I'm just going to leave this out here by itself for a day to let you all dig it.

@bosak superb!
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@bosak superb!
@BobHorowitz Thank you!
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#photography #filmphotography #retrobosak
Roll 1969park05: Berkeley (May 30, 1969)
This panorama was taken on 12 frames stitched together in Photoshop. The fact that I took the set as a panorama and then held on to the negatives for half a century until technology made it possible to render this image is so cool that I'm just going to leave this out here by itself for a day to let you all dig it.

What's the event there? Some kind of concert? Or is this just a normal day at the beach before air conditioning became widespread?
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What's the event there? Some kind of concert? Or is this just a normal day at the beach before air conditioning became widespread?
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#photography #filmphotography #retrobosak
Roll 1969park05: Berkeley (May 30, 1969)
This panorama was taken on 12 frames stitched together in Photoshop. The fact that I took the set as a panorama and then held on to the negatives for half a century until technology made it possible to render this image is so cool that I'm just going to leave this out here by itself for a day to let you all dig it.

@bosak@flx.masto.host I prefer Abel Gance, 1928.
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@Spencerlindsay Sure! I'll be interested to see what you can make of it.
Wild! https://superspl.at/scene/126fd14e
Go in through the point of the triangle. That's the camera location.
I think it would probably do better with a single from your pano.
I built this with Apple's new Sharp Monocular View Synthesis in Less Than a Second, released by Apple's ML team in December.
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@bosak Amazing!
@chris Thanks!
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Wild! https://superspl.at/scene/126fd14e
Go in through the point of the triangle. That's the camera location.
I think it would probably do better with a single from your pano.
I built this with Apple's new Sharp Monocular View Synthesis in Less Than a Second, released by Apple's ML team in December.
@Spencerlindsay Honestly, I can't say that I'm impressed. This reminds me of what Google Maps does -- you get what looks like a 3D view, but it adds no useful information. (Which I guess it couldn't anyway, but it seems to be promising that at first, and I find that annoying.) Thanks for showing me what a splat is, anyhow. I had no idea.
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@Spencerlindsay Honestly, I can't say that I'm impressed. This reminds me of what Google Maps does -- you get what looks like a 3D view, but it adds no useful information. (Which I guess it couldn't anyway, but it seems to be promising that at first, and I find that annoying.) Thanks for showing me what a splat is, anyhow. I had no idea.
@bosak fair. It’s not a great example. What’s wild about this is that it usually takes hundreds of photos to create a splat. Also, because it looks for camera geometry when it converts, the stitched nature of your very cool image is freaking it out.
Thanks for indulging my weird curiosity!
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