(Redirected from Panoramic format)
In its most general sense, a 'panorama' is any wide view of a physical space. It has also come to refer to a
wide-angle representation of such a view — whether in
painting,
drawing,
photography,
film/
video, or a three-dimensional model. Further, the motion-picture term,
pan or
panning, is derived from "panorama".

A panorama from multiple images stitched together using
PTgui. This image shows the curved edges of each segment of the panorama which are due to the warping of the image to conform to the cylindrical projection used to present such a wide angle of view. These edges would normally be cropped so the image can be displayed in a more aesthetically pleasing manner.
The word was originally coined by the
Irish painter
Robert Barker to describe his
panoramic paintings of
Edinburgh. Shown on a cylindrical surface and viewed from the inside, they were exhibited in
London in
1792 as "The Panorama".
In the mid
19th century,
panoramic paintings and models became a very popular way to represent landscapes and historical events. Audiences of Europe in this period were thrilled by the aspect of
illusion, immersed in a winding 360 degree panorama and given the impression of standing in a new environment. The
Dutch marine painter
Hendrik Willem Mesdag created and established the
Panorama Mesdag of
The Hague,
Netherlands, in
1881, a cylindrical painting more than 14 meters high and roughly 40 meters in diameter (120 meters in circumference). In the same year of 1881, the
Bourbaki Panorama in
Lucerne,
Switzerland, which exhibits a circular painting, was created by
Edouard Castres. The painting measures about 10 meters in height with a circumference of more than 100 meters. Another example would be the
Atlanta Cyclorama, depicting the
Civil War Battle of Atlanta. It was first displayed in
1887, and is 42 feet high by 358 feet wide. Even larger than these paintings is the
Racławice Panorama localed in
Wrocław,
Poland, which measures 120 x 15 meters.
Panoramic photography soon came to displace painting as the most common method for creating wide views. Not long after the introduction of the
Daguerreotype in
1839, photographers began assembling multiple images of a view into a single wide image. In the late 19th century, panoramic cameras using curved film holders employed clockwork drives to scan a line image in an arc to create an image over almost 180 degrees. Digital photography of the late twentieth century greatly simplified this assembly process, which is now known as
image stitching. Such stitched images may even be fashioned into crude
virtual reality movies, using one of many technologies such as
Apple Computer's
QuickTime VR or
Java. A
rotating line camera such as the
Panoscan allows the capture of very high resolution panoramic images and eliminates the need for
image stitching.
On rare occasions, panoramic, 360° movies have been constructed for specially designed display spaces — typically at
theme parks,
world's fairs, and museums. Starting in
1955,
Disney has created
360° theaters for its parks and the
Swiss Transport Museum in
Lucerne,
Switzerland, features a theater that is a large cylindrical space with an arrangement of screens whose bottom is several meters above the floor. Panoramic systems that are less than 360° around also exist. For example,
Cinerama used a curved screen and
IMAX movies are projected on a dome above the spectators.
One final form of panoramic representation is digital mapping generated from
SRTM data. In these diagrams, a computer calculates the panorama from a given point.
See also
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Panorama stitchers, viewers and utilities
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Panoramic Tripod Heads
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Diorama
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Panoramic painting
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Panoramic photography
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Panning (camera)
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Widescreen film/video formats
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Panorama Tools open source panorama creation and viewing software
External links
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Open source GNU GPL program to create arbitrary panoramas; includes links to the first published papers on automated estimation of projective relationship between multiple pictures of the same subject matter.
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Panotools.org community site for
Panotools software users, info & tutorials for creation of digital panoramic images
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Harlem-13-Gigapixels, the biggest panorama in the world