Stereo Cyclographe A camera with combined two-fixed focus panoramic camera in one mahogany-wooded box. The lenses were eight centimeters apart from each other with an indicator in between the lens to help the photographer set the camera level. A clock motor transported the nine-centimeter-wide film along with turning the shaft that rotated the camera. The camera could make a 9 × 80 cm pair that required a special viewer. These images were mostly used for mapping purposes.
Wonder Panoramic Camera Made in 1890 in Berlin, Germany, by Rudolf Stirn, the Wonder Panoramic Camera needed the photographer for its motive power. A string, inside of the camera, hanging through a hole in the tripod screw, wound around a pulley inside the wooden box camera. To take a panoramic photo, the photographer swiveled the metal cap away from the lens to start the exposure. The rotation could be set for a full 360-degree view, producing an eighteen-inch-long negative. As the photograph is taken, the lens pivots around its rear nodal point while a slit exposes a vertical strip of film that is aligned with the axis of the lens. The exposure usually takes a fraction of a second. Typically, these cameras capture a field of view between 110° and 140° and an aspect ratio of 2:1 to 4:1. The images produced occupy between 1.5 and 3 times as much space on the
negative as the standard 24 mm x 36 mm
35 mm frame. Cameras of this type include the
Widelux,
Noblex, and the
Horizon. These have a negative size of approximately 24x58 mm. The Russian "Spaceview FT-2", originally an artillery spotting camera, produced wider negatives, 12 exposures on a 36-exposure 35 mm film. Short rotation cameras usually offer few
shutter speeds and have poor focusing ability. Most models have a fixed focus lens, set to the
hyperfocal distance of the maximum aperture of the lens, often at around . Photographers wishing to photograph closer subjects must use a small
aperture to bring the foreground into focus, limiting the camera's use in low-light situations. Rotating lens cameras produce distortion of straight lines. This looks unusual because the image, which was captured from a sweeping, curved perspective, is being viewed flat. To view the image correctly, the viewer would have to produce a sufficiently large print and curve it identically to the curve of the film plane. This distortion can be reduced by using a swing-lens camera with a standard focal length lens. The FT-2 has a 50 mm while most other 35 mm swing lens cameras use a wide-angle lens, often 28 mm. Similar distortion is seen in panoramas shot with digital cameras using in-camera
stitching. made with a
Sony Cyber-shot, showing faults (discontinuities) caused by objects in fast motion during image capture. The panorama is
stitched from multiple exposures taken while the camera is manually rotated.
Full rotation survey telescope
Rotating panoramic cameras, also called
slit scan or
scanning cameras are capable of 360° or greater degree of rotation. A clockwork or motorized mechanism rotates the camera continuously and pulls the film through the camera, so the motion of the film matches that of the image movement across the image plane.
Exposure is made through a narrow slit. The central part of the image field produces a very sharp picture that is consistent across the frame. Digital
rotating line cameras image a 360° panorama line by line. Digital cameras in this style are the
Panoscan and Eyescan. Analogue cameras include the
Cirkut (1905),
Leme (1962), Hulcherama (1979),
Globuscope (1981), Seitz Roundshot (1988) and Lomography Spinner 360° (2010).
Fixed lens Fixed lens cameras, also called
flatback,
wide view or
wide field, have fixed lenses and a flat image plane. These are the most common form of panoramic camera and range from inexpensive
APS cameras to sophisticated 6x17 cm and 6x24 cm
medium format cameras. Panoramic cameras using sheet film are available in formats up to 10 x 24 inches. APS or 35 mm cameras produce cropped images in a panoramic aspect ratio using a small area of film. Specialized 35 mm or medium format fixed-lens panoramic cameras use wide field lenses to cover an extended length as well as the full height of the film to produce images with a greater image width than normal. Pinhole cameras of a variety of constructions can be used to make panoramic images. A popular design is the 'oatmeal box', a vertical cylindrical container in which the pinhole is made in one side and the film or photographic paper is wrapped around the inside wall opposite, and extending almost right to the edge of, the pinhole. This generates an egg-shaped image with more than 180° view. Because they expose the film in a single exposure, fixed lens cameras can be used with
electronic flash, which would not work consistently with rotational panoramic cameras. With a flat image plane, 90° is the widest field of view that can be captured in focus and without significant wide-angle distortion or vignetting. Lenses with an imaging angle approaching 120 degrees require a
center filter to correct vignetting at the edges of the image. Lenses that capture angles of up to 180°, commonly known as
fisheye lenses exhibit extreme geometrical distortion but typically display less brightness falloff than
rectilinear lenses. Examples of this type of camera are: Taiyokoki Viscawide-16 ST-D (
16 mm film), Siciliano Camera Works Pannaroma (35mm, 1987),
Hasselblad X-Pan (35 mm, 1998),
Linhof 612PC,
Horseman SW612, Linhof Technorama 617, Tomiyama Art Panorama 617 and 624, and
Fuji G617 and GX617 (
Medium format (film)). The
panomorph lens provides a full hemispheric field of view with no blind spot, unlike
catadioptric lenses. ==Digital photography==