Hi,
I'm attempting to to find out if an idea is worth pursuing or not. Idea: Using either a Canon 7d or 5dMKII with the Canon TS-E 24II lens I want to make high pixel count composite pictures only using the shift and rotate functions (not the tilt).
I've read in the Cambridge in Colour website that it is possible to shoot center, up, down, left, right. This yields a series of 5 shots, overlapped (I'm presuming) that could be subsequently composited using some program. The composite would be cross formatted involving five pictures.
Now the good stuff: can I use this TS-E-24II to fill in the upper left, upper right, lower left, and lower right and create one composite just like mentioned below:
Tilt/Shift Lenses: Using Shift Movements to Control Perspective
scroll down to heading: Shift Movements for Seamless Panoramas.
The blue pictures are straight forward. I get it.
Below the blue composite pictures is the area I'm most interested in:
'Shift can also be used in other directions than just up-down or left-right. The example below illustrates all combinations of shift in 30° increments for a 35 mm full frame sensor in landscape orientation:"
Just had a long talk with Canon tech and I was told these 30 degree detent controlled rotations would present very very complex challenges for getting three pictures to share in common nine points precisely so that the can be composited later. The tech person was specifically referring to a stitiching program named PhotoStitch requiring sufficient overlap and at the least 3 precise overlayed points per two pictures (three pics requiring nine such points).
Question 1:
Is there a relatively straightforward way of doing what's described at this Cambridge Colour website at the url listed above using this particular lens (TS-E 24mmII) that rotates? In the picture supplied in the url listed above it looks like the composite has two different pictures for each of the intermediate positions (covering 30 and 60 degrees upper right: 120 and 150 lower right: 210 and 240 lower left: and finally 300 and 330 degrees upper left----the four areas of the original 5 shot cross composite). If my assumptions are correct, then I could wind up with a composite pic with a very high pixel count using a crop factor or full frame canon.
Question 2: I have a Mac (iMac I7). If I don't have the cash to buy photoshop is there another program (aperture 3, Lightroom, elements) that can do layers like the author described at this Cambridge Colour website in the section referring to composite photos using tilt-shift lenses? Or do I need to get a stitching program? If so which is recommended for Macs, canon, using ts-e 24mmII lens?
Thank you for any insights.
Spike