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A New Kind Of Heist: Six Apps For Free

Those crazy MacHeisters are at it again, and this time the deal is even harder to resist.
The first ever MacHeist Nano won’t cost you a penny. You can download, without charge, fully licensed copies of ShoveBox, WriteRoom, Twitterific, TinyGrab, and Hordes of Orcs. If 500,000 people take part (which I think is a pretty safe [...]

Getting More iPhone Home Screens – And Keeping Them

A couple of weeks back, I wrote Temporarily Get More iPhone Home Screens Via Cunning Bug Exploit, but had heard staying away from the iTunes Applications tab within my iPhone was probably a Very Good Idea. Reader Larry Pressnell noted that since the most recent iTunes update, his extra screens have been accessible in iTunes.
Since [...]

Cult of Mac Favorite: MobileStacks Is the Best Reason To Jailbreak. Period.

I really like Stacks on my Mac. Stacks makes it fast and easy to find files, folders and apps right from the Dock. It makes managing a Mac pretty slick with all sorts of little UI tricks. That’s why I recently gave MobileStack a go on my jailbroken iPhone.
I must say that it lives up to the [...]

Gallery: Behind the Scenes From Two Classic Apple TV Ads

Is this Steve Jobs driving a tank in a classic Apple TV spot from the late 1990s? That was the rumor at the time: Jobs was making cameos in Apple commercials.
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Photo stitching with iPhone

Yes, we know the iPhone camera is rubbish compared to most of its cameraphone rivals. But that needn’t stop people being creative with it. People like…

P0psharlow, who has created some stunning panoramic images with an iPhone and some very deft image manipulation:

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Fulton Street workers study

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Red Square 80s gentrification

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Construction on Fulton Street

Or Adselwood, who took these two gorgeous shots of the Telstra Dome in Melbourne.

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Footystitch

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Telstra Dome

Have you produced something creative with your iPhone camera? Do tell.

(All images reproduced under Creative Commons license. Thanks to the photographers.)

About the author

gilest

Giles Turnbull is a freelance writer in England. He is a columnist for PA, and has written for the BBC, Guardian, Daily Telegraph, MacUser, Macworld, and The Morning News. He has a blog you can ignore and a Twitter account you needn't follow.

Email the author | Read more posts by Giles Turnbull.

8 comments

    check David Hockney… hen you know where the mustard came from.

    I should mention the iPhone App “Panolab” that enables this kind of stitching on the iPhone itself : not that handy but still very enjoyable while on the go.

    I made a panoramic mount using the plastic tray from my V1 iPhone’s packaging:
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/salsaviz/sets/72157602342137238/
    Result:
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/salsaviz/1529217915/

    WOW. O_O

    Whoa. How did Adselwood get the lighting so balanced on every view? Usually you see some odd light/color balancing going on from frame to frame, even if the stitching itself is seamless.

    You can de-vignette the individual photos to make the lighting match up using image magick. It’s tedious but worth it for those really special shots. Also a lot of the pano-making programs are pretty good at blending the lighting effectively. Check out autostitch and panavue.

    I owe a debt to David Hockney. Decades ago, I saw his pano collages made from Polaroid and from C-Prints. “Ah, ha,” I say to myself, take several pictures of one scene, put them together to make a panorama with a “cubist” look, very clever. And since then, it has been one of my favorite methods to use when appropriate.
    -p0ps

    We all stand on the shoulders of giants.

    Thanks all for the flattering comments. Blewyn hit the nail on the head with the lighting, the panos where done in autostich which does a fairly nice job blending the edges of each shot. If you view the full size images you can see the differences much clearer.