New Wall: Sunrise on the Church of the Good Shepherd
- At March 25, 2009
- By Neil Creek
- In walls
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A new free background image is available today!
This image is free for you to use however you like, as long as you abide by the following Creative Commons lisence:
You can also purchase a fine art print of the image. Just click on the “Buy Print” button on the image’s page. If you use the image, please tell your twitter friends with the link below the image.
The Pinnacles print available
- At February 25, 2008
- By Neil Creek
- In For Sale
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This week’s print available for sale on the Fine Art PhotoBlog is one of my favourite landscapes. This is a 360 degree panorama of the Pinnacles that I took way back in 2005 when I was first learning how to do panoramic photography. However, the version that I am offering for sale is a “remastered” version of the panorama I first stitched three years ago.
In the time since then, I have learned a lot about processing and stitching panoramas. This new version has eliminated the alignment problems it once had, and I’ve done a much better job cleaning up the image to remove a couple of cars, the shadow of the tripod and my footprints leading up to the location.
You can read a lot of information about the photo on its page on the Fine Art PhotoBlog, such as the origin of the structures, and what it was like to shoot in this remarkable location. There is also a link to a very special way to view the panorama. Because this is a full spherical photo, it can be viewed as an interactive panorama, giving you the illusion that you are actually standing in the centre of it and letting you look around in all directions. It really is a must see effect!
Finally, there’s something extra special I’m able to offer with signed prints of this photo. Due to the fact that it is seamless around the edges, I am able to recompose the whole panorama by sliding it left or right to the customers’ taste. I can only do this on the collectable signed print version of this photo, as ImageKind will only let me sell single versions of images. And of course, being a high resolution panorama, it can be printed to very large sizes negligible loss of quality.
So head over to the Fine Art PhotoBlog and have a look at this new panoramic photo.
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