Welcome to The Windows Blog 


Panoramic Stitches from Around the Pacific Northwest

This last weekend, my friend and I headed into Central Washington State for a "Spring Break" roadtrip adventure. Our first stop was Seattle, and then we headed over the Snoqualmie Pass into Central Washington where we stopped by Grand Coulee Dam before heading down to the Tri-Cities area before heading home. I took with me my Dell XPS M1530 (PRODUCT) RED Laptop with me running of course Windows Vista Ultimate (PRODUCT) RED. I also took my Canon HV20 HD Camcorder, and a Canon Digital Rebel XTi - both of which are Certified for Windows Vista.

On the road, I focused mostly on photography. Many of the places we visited didn't really work well for video and I didn't feel me standing in front of the camera playing "tour guide" would be of any real value. I relied heavily of course on Windows Vista and Windows Live Photo Gallery to import and manage my photos. Because the Canon Digital Rebel XTi is Certified for Windows Vista - it was hassle free to import sometimes up to 400 pictures into Windows Live Photo Gallery. And the photos themselves averaged about 3MB each as I was shooting in the highest quality possible at 10.1 megapixels.

In using Windows Live Photo Gallery, I have the ability to create a panoramic stitch from the photos I took - probably my most favorite feature in Windows Live Photo Gallery. In shooting photos - I made sure I was shooting with the intent to create stitches. What does that mean really? I would take a picture from one angle, then the next, then the next - which would then allow for Windows Live Photo Gallery to create excellent stitches. I'll probably do a video on exactly how I shoot for stitching later on.

So now I have a few really cool panoramic stitches to share of the places we stopped on our roadtrip. I go through them in chronological order with some commentary to add context to each photo.

While in Seattle, we ended up walking down to the waterfront from the Space Needle. I took this shot on the roof of the Bell Harbor Conference Center:

View from roof of Bell Harbor Conference Center

Later on, we decided to head on up to the observation deck of the Space Needle. I was able to get several awesome panoramic shots of Seattle from the top of the Space Needle. Here is the first series of shots I took - looking northwest out toward Puget Sound:

Looking Northwest over Puget Sound from Space Needle

Then I took some shots to create this shot overlooking Elliot Bay:

View of Puget Sound from Space Needle

This is Seattle and probably my favorite panoramic stitch of the Seattle bunch:

View of Seattle from the Space Needle

And finally this is looking east towards the Cascade Mountain Range. You can see Lake Union on the lower left:

View looking East from Space Needle

The next day - we headed over the Snoqualmie Pass toward Central Washington State and the Grand Coulee Dam. Up over the pass, it got quite snowy which was a nice (and interesting) change of scenery:

Snow on Snoqualmie Pass

About 100 miles later we were here overlooking the Columbia River near Vantage, WA:

View of Columbia River

Back on the road heading to Grand Coulee Dam - we ended up stopping in the middle of nowhere for this shot:

Middle of Nowhere

In Central Washington, there is quite a bit of interesting geological features (part of why we headed out here). Here is a panoramic shot of Dry Falls. Dry Falls about 10,000-15,000 years ago was a huge water fall carved out by ice age flooding. You can read more about the history of Dry Falls here. But to be here and see it in person was absolutely amazing:

Dry Falls

We finally reached Grand Coulee Dam. It's pretty big. They say it is the largest concrete structure in the United States. And you can see - there is quite a bit of concrete! We wanted to get a dam tour but it so happens that the very day we drove hundreds of miles to see the dam was the day they decided to do maintenance on the elevators for the tours. This is another one of my favorite shots from the trip:

Grand Coulee Dam

Our trip ended the next day on Oregon Coast outside Tillamook, OR:

Oregon Coast

Hopefully you've enjoyed seeing these panoramic stitches of some of these amazing places. Creating your own stitches in Windows Live Photo Gallery is really easy too - all you need is a digital camera and to be able to import into Windows Live Photo Gallery. You can download Windows Live Photo Gallery, part of the Windows Live suite, here.

I'd like to give a shout out to Canon for loaning me the Canon Digital Rebel XTi for the trip. It is a pretty slick camera and as these shots show, it takes some pretty good photos. If you are looking for a DSLR - definitely take a look at this camera.


Comments

  1. Posted on: March 26, 2008 at 10:14AM  

    Panoramic stich works quite well. My only complaint is I still want Windows Live Photo Gallery and WIndows Photo Gallery to Merge...Windows Photo Gallery has more options for slideshows, and in x64 it is an x64 app and it feels faster loading high resolution images.

    Here is a panoramic I took of chicago...it isn't that great.

    http://flickr.com/photos/obiwantoby/2345758865/sizes/l/

    Here is one of Shedd as well. I thought I had the lightened edited one up, but I guess not.

    http://flickr.com/photos/obiwantoby/2341106095/sizes/l/

  2. Posted on: March 26, 2008 at 1:27PM  

    I use the free program AutoStitch from www dot autostitch dot net. Besides doing a better job than most others, it has the ability to auto-assemble panoramas consisting of multiple shots in both directions (say, 3 photos tall by 12 wide).

  3. Posted on: March 26, 2008 at 3:36PM  

    WOW!!!

    Nice photo Brandon Congratulation!!!!

  4. Posted on: March 27, 2008 at 1:05AM  

    What about the XSI? hehehe (Shameless Plug) Though it doesn't have a certification (yet I think) My Pentax K100D works extremely well :-)

  5. Posted on: March 27, 2008 at 11:00AM  

    here's someting out of a video game (Games for Windows *hint*hint) that is set in Seattle:

    http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v370/kuyaaids/wic_seattle.jpg

  6. Posted on: March 29, 2008 at 12:53AM  

    Very nice work! You are good guy.

  7. Posted on: September 18, 2008 at 9:18AM  

    since you're talking about Live Photo Gallery...

    2 days ago I found that the photo importer for Windows Live Photo Gallery (which is so much better than the default one) was broken so I un-installed WLPG then re-installed it and now it works again.

    Yesterday I was setting up a brand new system and the same thing happened. Using REPAIR didn't help either, only re-installing helps.

    When you choose WLPG from autoplay to import photos from a memory card (for example) it gives you this error:

    "This file does not have a program associated with it for performing this action. Create an association in the Set Associations control panel."

    I know there's nothing wrong with the file type associations because WLPG opens and works fine when double clicking on an image. It's just the photo importer that's broken.

    It seems to have happened after doing an update.

    I see this morning that "Update For Windows Live Photo Gallery KB 955359" showed up and I'm affraid to install it because it's probably what breaks the photo importer.

    QUESTIONS:

    Is this a known problem? I've found other people online who have the same problem.

    Why does KB 955359 show up at all considering the it's a fix for XP and I'm running Vista32?

    Maybe this update isn't meant for Vista users but for some reason it appears in Vista Windows Update and in turn it breaks WLPG?

Trackbacks

  1. Posted by: Sarah In Tampa on March 27, 2008 at 2:05PM

    Brandon LeBlanc just posted some great panoramic stitches on the

  2. Posted by: Brandon LeBlanc - A Self-Proclaimed Windows Geek on March 31, 2008 at 2:57AM

    I went on a roadtrip this past weekend with a good friend of mine and took a ton of photos which I used Windows Live Photo Gallery to stitch together to create panoramic shots. I did a write up with lots more panoramic shots over on the Windows Experience

  3. Posted by: The Windows Experience Blog on April 05, 2008 at 9:32PM

    For the last week, I had been using one of the photos I took on my recent trip around Washington State

  4. Posted by: Satisfy Me on April 06, 2008 at 10:17PM

    As we get ready for a week off for spring break, I thought it would be good to lead off the with the

  5. Posted by: Angus Logan's Blog on April 11, 2008 at 10:28PM

    i’m not talking about Project Runway, I’m talking about a Panoramic Photo stitch off. Over

  6. Posted by: The Windows Experience Blog on May 09, 2008 at 4:31AM

    I caught up with Deryl McCartney, Marketing Manager for the Windows Vista Logo Program , to get a general

  7. Posted by: The Windows Experience Blog on May 22, 2008 at 12:36AM

    A couple weeks ago, the Deep Zoom Composer Team announced an update to Deep Zoom Composer that was first