Video: How to use Ricoh Theta Stitcher+ Adobe Lightroom with Ricoh Theta Z19486
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WGAN Forum Founder & WGAN-TV Podcast Host Atlanta, Georgia |
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Ricoh Theta Stitcher & Lightroom Tutorial: Get Maximum Quality from your Theta Z1 | Video courtesy of The 360 Guy YouTube Channel (31 May 2019) Hi All, If you (just) got a Ricoh Theta Z1 – or are thinking about buying one – this video from 360º 1-Click Camera Subject Matter Expect The 360 Guy (Daniel) will likely be helpful. The 360 Guy shows the workflow to get the best results from Adobe Lightroom + the Ricoh Theta Stitcher Plugin + the Ricoh Theta Z1 DNG RAW mode files will likely be helpful. Have you tried this workflow yet? What are your thoughts versus automatic mode? WGAN Forum discussions tagged: Ricoh Theta V Versus (Insta360 One X, Ricoh Theta V) Best, Dan P.S. Here are Amazon shopping links for the Ricoh Theta Z1 and accessories ... |
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Standard Member Windsor, UK |
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I would rather just shoot with a DSLR and stitch in PTGui. Much easier, quicker and better looking. The point of a one shot camera is doing one shot. | ||
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WGAN Fan Club Member Queensland, Australia |
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Quote:Originally Posted by leonvanzweel Totally agree. Whoever offers to stitch 360 manually does not seem to be doing many panos or just doing them for fun. The last Thursday I was doing a commercial project and did 330 panos outdoor with Theta V. It took me about 5 hours to shoot them and about 7 hours just to place them in correct spots with Pano2VR Pro(thanks Ricoh for bad GPS data with errors up to 50-70 meters). I could not even imagine how much time would it take me for stitching all 330 panoramas. |
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Standard Member Windsor, UK |
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The quality of a one-shot spherical camera will always remain built in. Poor contrast and parallax error. To improve on the parallax error a two lens solution is used to minimize the nodal point offset, but it exacerbates the lighting contrast. Using a four or multi-lens solution improves the lighting contrast but exacerbates the nodal point offset. The main advantage of one-shot cameras is the speed and ease of use. One just has to compromise on parallax error and poor image quality. | ||
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