Requiem for a Tree -- Pano Apps Tested
[note: all images in the post are hosted on flickr. Clicking on an image will open a new tab/window with a larger version of the image.]
This was one of my roommate's and my favorite trees. It stood in the side of our front lawn, and bloomed like this every spring. It gave our bit of space some character as one would drive or walk by the front of the house.
On Friday (June 10th, 2011) the tree was struck by lightening, and most of it fell to the ground. Luckily there was no damage to the house, no lines were downed, and the tree fell away from the neighbor's house.
The image above was taken this spring as the tree neared full bloom. I was on my way out the door, headed to work, and I tried to capture the peaceful hope that this bloom always represents to me. The light was far from perfect, and I was in a hurry, so the image is certainly not one of my best, but I still like it.
The image below was taken from a similar perspective (standing in the yard, instead of the doorway) the day after the tree was struck by lightening.
Tree Down 1Overwhelmed by the immensity of the tree in that image, I stepped back to fit a bit more in the frame.
Tree Down 2Here, you can see that only part of the tree fell. A tall, lonely branch still stands in the corner of the yard, awkwardly observing the wreckage.
Then I walked around to the front of the tree. The next image provides a much clearer depiction of just what happened, what got taken down, and what -- for now -- remains.
Tree Down 3All three of theses images were made on June 11th, the day after the storm. Tree Down 1 and Tree Down 2 were captured late that morning. Tree Down 3 was captured late afternoon/early evening. On my way in from work. On the 12th, I decided to make another round of photographs.
The following images were meant to be a quick (and not terribly thorough) test of the many panorama apps I have on my phone. In fairness, none of these apps are really meant to be used on a subject that is so close. I take these results with a grain of salt. I often use these apps in such situations, though, simply as a means to get more in the frame when I'm so close to a subject and don't have a way to effectively step back far enough to fit what I want into the frame.
The first image was made with Pano ($1.99), an app that lets you capture images in succession (in app), showing you a small overlay to help you keep things lined up. When you're done capturing images, you tap a check mark, and the app begins stitching the images together.
Tree Down 4 (Pano)If you click on the image to view it larger, you'll quickly be able to spot a couple of poorly stictched seams. The app does, however, do a nice job of exposing the entire panoramic image consistantly -- an advantage of capturing images in app.
(Pano can make some very nice images. Here is a favorite from Coca-Cola Park in Allentown, PA.)
Next up we'll look at an app called 360 ($0.99). The app truly lets the photographer capture a 360 degree image. It takes a little practice to center the frame the way you want, but it's a lot of fun to play with. As one begins to capture a panoramic image with 360, the app lays out a grid. The photographer fills that grid to desire, while still able to see the portions of the image already captured.
Tree Down 7.0 (360)
Tree Down 7.1 (360 Cropped)Here you don't even need to click to the larger versions to see that 360 had major issues capturing and stitching this image. There are full on breaks in the stitching where elements simply don't line up at all. Also troubling is the fact that the image is plainly overexposed. I have had less luck with 360 than with any of my pano apps, no matter the situation, but it seems to have a particularly difficuties with close up subjects.
(Want to see more? Try this experiment I tried with 360 one day at work.)
Now for some creative fun. I love the app, You Gotta See This ($1.99). It let's the photographer simply pan around a scene to capture images. Then it presents seven different treatments of the result as panoramic collages. I've had great luck and great fun with this in several situations. I particularly like firing up this app at baseball stadiums. the challenge is in what the photographer can control -- the speed of panning, and the overall order/direction of movement/capture. I try to make sure the last bit captured is significant (often centerd) so it will appear "on top" in the resulting collage. I can't say that this was the perfect situation for the awkardly named app, but I was still interested to see how the collages would turn out.
Tree Down 5.0 (You Gotta See This: Light Table Collage)
Tree Down 5.2 (You Gotta See This: Dark Table Collage)
Tree Down 5.4 (You Gotta See This: Shining Through)These first three images seem to use the same basic formula for creating the collage, just with different backgrounds (white, black, and none). The "bad" stitching is the point here. Images are overlayed to blend together in an interesting way. Nothing frames the individual images, so the edges blend together lending the image all sorts of geometric shifts. What fun!
(For a better example of this collage engine at work check out this image from Columbus's Huntington Park. Here's one from Allentown, PA's Coca-Cola Park.)
The next image is my least favorite from the app.
Tree Down 5.5 (You Gotta See This: Magic Light)The collage technique (?) is similar to the three above, but it adds light frames to each individual image, leaves out a lot of visual information, and adds a gaudy background that drives me batty. I can't recall ever choosing the "Magic Light" presentation for output, exept for the sake of documenting experiments like this one.
Tree Down 5.1 (You Gotta See This: Polaroid Stone)The image above is perhaps the blend between the first three and the "Magic Light" collages. Subtle white frames separate the images, providing a kind of definition that can be pleasant in a collage. The background is far less psychedelic than the troubling "Magic Light" version. I'd love to be able to generate a collage like this without a background though. (Yes, I realize this would be fairly easy to do in any number of image editing applications, but I want simplicity!)
(Want a better example of this filter at work? Check out an image I created at the 2010 DCI Eastern Classic in Allentown, PA.)
Two more "You Gotta See This" treatments remain. In this case (capturing the fallen tree), I don't think they provide the sort of resultant image I really want, but I've had some luck with them in other situations.
Tree Down 5.3 (You Gotta See This: Vintage Fabric)
Tree Down 5.6 (You Gotta See This: Wall of Tiles)
I often like output from the "Vintage Fabric" collages, but I can't stand the background. The slightly off-kilter layout of the individual images is a great touch. The "Wall of Tiles" version takes care of the unsightly background, and lays the images out in a straightforward grid. I sometimes wish that there was a medium ground with the off-kilter look of the "Vintage Fabric" filter and the simple background of the "Wall of Tiles." Again, this subject doesn't allow either of these filters to really shine, but I think you can get the idea of what they try to present.
(Here is a favorite example of this filer from Columbus's Huntington Park.)
Next up is my old favorite pano app, AutoStitch ($1.99). It presents the ultimate freedom to the photographer, who can capture images in any camera app he or she wishes (or import them to the phone, having captured them on any camera). When AutoStich begins, it simply promts the user to select images (in any order!) to be stitched together. Then, when prompted, it goes to work generating one giant image. It will even do the cropping for you in app -- I usually save both cropped and uncropped versions).
Tree Down 8.0 (AutoStitch)
Tree Down 8.1 (AutoStitch Cropped)I used 27 (!) individual images for this panorama, and stitching problems abound in these results. AutoStitch is not at its best with close up subjects (as I've learned over and over). It does much better with landscapes, cityscapes, and buildings from a bit of a distance. I still love it for its ease of use. Sometimes, I don't want to take the time to process a panorama "on the spot." I want to keep capturing images. This app allows me the freedom to get a series of images that I can process later so that I can keep clicking the shutter in the moment. Please forgive the app this poor example.
(There are some better examples of AutoStitch's work in a post full of photos from my June, 2009 trip to Pittsburgh. Here is an image I created at work with AutoStitch. I gave Crew Stadium the AutoStitch treatment. Twice. More drum corps Autostitching here, here, here, and here. I even got funky with some HDR and AutoStitch -- the Ohio Capital building was my subject. Here's a less than stellar pano made at Browns Stadium. Here's a better one from Michigan Stadium.)
Finally, let's look at a new favorite, Microsoft's Photosynth (free). Beyond the fact that this app comes in at the low, low price of free, there is much to love about Microsoft's entry to the pano app genre. It is very easy to use. Photosynth presents a grid similar to the 360 app, and lets the photographer fill in the grid with the scene. It also allows a full 360 degree capture, but also expands the imagable (?) vertical space beyond what the 360 app does. Finally it is, by far, the best app I know for creating panoramic images of close up subjects.
Tree Down 6.0 (Photosynth)
Tree Down 6.1 (Photosynth Cropped)Of all of these experiments, Photosynth exposed the image the best and stitched the image the best. There are a few unfortunate seems in this image, but the subject is generally in tact -- so far Photosynth has, in my experience, smartly prioritized subjects in every situation. There is no in app cropping, but it's easy enough to crop images on a desktop computer or with several other image editing apps on the iPhone. (It may be worth noting that here I chose to crop the bottom a little further up than necessary to eliminate my own shadow.) As a free app, I can't help but recommend Photosynth to ANYONE interested in creating panoramic images on an iPhone. It is easy to use and versatile.
(I haven't had much time to play with this app yet, but here's a panoramic image I created with Photosynth at work.)
All of these apps have their pros and cons. Perhaps 360 is at the bottom of the list, but I still want to try it out in a few more situations. The early returns on Photosynth would seem to put it at the top, but more testing is required. AutoStitch is quick and extremely easy to use, while allowing processing after the images are captured. You Gotta See This lends itself to creative output that can be fun and aesthetically pleasant. Pano is somewhere right in the middle. It was the first pano app I tried, and though I've drifted away from it to a degree, I still like to try it from time to time and compare it to the others.
The Saucer List
- Huntington Park (Made it on Sunday. I'll keep going, though -- it's closeby and inexpensive)
- John Bryan State Park
- Hocking Hills State Park
- A State Park outside of Ohio (still to be determined)
- Fish (the verb) -- specifically find places to fish (and fish them) that are easy enough to get to and from in a day off
- Jacobs Field
- Great American Ballpark
- Friends in Oxford
- Locate and catch up with Phi Mu Alpha alumni in and around Columbus (found one this past weekend!)
- Wild Goose Collective Story Night (or whatever it’s called)
- Get to at least three drum corps shows
- See a play
- Get to an Art Museum (preferably one I have yet visited, though it’s been years since I’ve been to Cincinnati or Toledo, so....)
- An already (oh so loosely) planned trip with friends old and new to Detroit to see The Moth
Subscription Spike

Those few of you who visit this space regularly know that I don't mind in the least that you can be counted on my own two hands. I've never put much effort into developing a large following, and my ramblings are fairly sporadic and sometimes random. Still, I get a small thrill when a post garners a greater than normal number of hits. I've been riding at five subscribers for, well, ever -- and I'm one of them. So how and why I had 30+ subscribers for the better part of a week is well beyond my reckoning. Why they were gone so quickly is also a mystery. Perhaps it was a shortlived bug behind the scenes? Maybe some tumblr friends popped over and popped away again? Who knows? Still, it's fun to see.
My Basketball Bracket (Take 2, and the story behind the cropped image from take 1)
I had the hardest time posting an image of this bracket via my iPhone earlier today. I mean crazy hard!
I filled out the bracket easily enough on my iPhone using the ESPN Bracket app. Easy. But the app doesn't have an all at once view (due to the small amount of screen real estate. Fine. I'm tech-savvy enough to figure this out.
I logged in to my home desktop computer at home via my iPhone using LogMeIn (logmein.com). And found the bracket on the espn site. Easy.
I took a screenshot with Skitch. Sort of easy. It captured the window, but I just wanted the bracket. Normally cropping on Skitch is as easy as grabbing a border and pulling in to where you want it. For whatever reason, Skitch wouldn't read my iPhone multi-touch gestures (double-tap and drag in place of mouse click-and-hold and drag) they way I needed it to. No problem!
I tried to upload the image, hosted on Skitch.com, to my PhotoBucket account, where I knew I could use online tools to crop the image. No dice. The upload-from-url feature wasn't working. Think, think, think... Got it!
I switch from Chrome to Safari (still on the home computer via the phone via logmein), loaded the Skitch.com page, and downloaded the image to my iPhoto library. There it was easy to crop down to what I wanted. Easy!
So I exported the image to a new folder, and uploaded that to PhotoBucket. That was where this morning's image was hosted.
Unfortunately I ran into a rare snag. I post my sports "ramblings" on a sports only feed on Posterous, which then auto-posts to my larger (squarespace) site. Sadly, Squarespace clipped the image instead of resizing it as Posterous had successfully done.
I figured, no problem. Just click on the image and your browser should take you to the full image on Photobucket. So I tried that on my phone and got a "image has been moved or deleted" error message. Obviously it had not been moved or deleted, or it wouldn't have been visible in the blog post(s).
So, your only hope of seeing my full bracket if you were starting at my Squarespace site, was to click the link to my Posterous site. It's not supposed to work that way. I logged in to Squarespace (on my home computer, via iPhone, via LogMeIn), and was unable to edit the post or add a follow-up (more iPhone does not a mouse replace). I opened the Squarespace app on the phone. I could have posted an explainer there, but I don't know my html code well enough to jump in and not screw something up if I can't constantly switch from preview to coded view.
So I gave up. Until now. This is the original screen capture, cropped the way I originally meant to with Skitch. The image is hosted on Skitch and posted to my Posterous site via the handy "Share on Posterous" bookmarklet. I've typed in the rest of the story here, will appropriately tag the entry (for Posterous -- another that cropped up when riding on iPhone wings) and activate the post. Finally. Yea!
Now you may feel welcome to ridicule me for my lack of tech-savvy AND basketball. Have fun!
So, we meet again, February.
So, we meet again, February.
Day 4, Jury Duty Lunches, November 2010 - a set on Flickr
More HDR experimentation (using TrueHDR, more Statehouse, and a look at the Ohio Theater. This was the last day I served on jury duty. I was actually sorry to see it end. I don't get downtown nearly often enough.
Days 2 & 3, Jury Duty Lunches, November 2010 - a set on Flickr
I don't remember why I took so few picture on day 2, but there were only a couple worth sharing, so this set covers two days. I was still fascinated by the statehouse, but I also realized on day 3 that TrueHDR (a fairly remarkable iPhone app) could be a fun way to get some better exposures. It very easily (even automatically) merges two different exposures to achieve a very simple HDR image. The final shot in this set/slideshow is one such image.
Day 1, Jury Duty Lunches, November 2010 - a set on Flickr
I spent the first week of November serving on Jury Duty at the Franklin County Courthouse. Everyday I spent my lunch hour taking pictures with my iPhone. I had a world of fun walking up and down High Street playing the local tourist and looking like a geek. I was reminded now much fun it is to explore a place with a camera and how beautiful this fair city of Columbus really is. I just had to look.
Red Dog Recommends: Angels We Have Heard on High (Stan Kenton)
A Musical Advent Calendar
1 December, 2010
Track: Angels We Have Heard on High
Album: from the creative world of Stan Kenton comes… A Merry Christmas!
Artist: Stank Kenton
Why it made the list: A Merry Christmas is one of my two favorite christmas albums. Ever. “Angels We Have Heard on High” was the hook track that commanded my attention oh so many years ago.
Click on the image for a link to my Amazon recommendations (where you’ll find a link to this track’s page on amazonMP3.com.
Red Dog Recommends: Flip Flop Fly Ball (web site)
Love this site (and seemingly most things Craig Robinson). His baseball infographics are truly awesome. This one may simply be amusing (and correct), but I heartily encourage you to go check out some others.




