Mark~ that is one cosmic cloudscape in your pan. So smooth as it meets the ocean, such vast clarity... relaxing emptyness.
Melo~ I like in your pan how you can see the spirit of the plantlife still bursting forth in whatever nutritious soil lurks in the cracks of the city.
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| North Berkeley Hills ~ From Claremont Canyon Ridge Trail // Click for 5778 x 1070 |
Here is a way of aligning the rotation of multiple images to create a panorama:
1) Bring all the images into Photoshop document, and align them as closely as possible on overlapping layers.
2) Grab one of the upper layers and reduce the opacity to 50%, and align one part of the images perfectly, even if it's just one tiny point. Optimally, align a piece in the middle, near the borderline where the two images transition.
3) Press Ctrl+T to free transform the layer. Move the little pivot point on the free transform gizmo to the tiny point where the two images align, and then rotate and scale the layer until they align.
4) Hit ENTER and set the opacity back to 100%, and then add a mask to the overlapping layer. Paint Black on the mask to soften and hide the line where the two images transition. Toggle hiding the overlapping layer to check the goodness of the mask and alignment.
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| UC Berkeley Campus @ Sunset |