<a class="link" rel="nofollow" href="http://www.canona560.com">http://www.canona560.com</a> <br /><a class="link" rel="nofollow" href="http://www.canonsd770.com">http://www.canonsd770.com</a> <br /><a class="link" rel="nofollow" href="http://www.nikond60.com">http://www.nikond60.com</a> <br />Using a full 360-degree panoramic image, you effectively can create a full 3D <br />environment. Wherever the CANON A560 camera turns, it will see the image, without stretching <br />or distortion. Going a step further, you could use the information provided in Chapter <br />9, “Creating and Using HDR Images,” to create HDR CANON A560 images and then create a <br />panorama as well. A panorama can be anything as simple as a wide extended shot or <br />a full 360-degree one as shown in CANON A560. The term panorama doesn’t just relate <br />to CANON A560 digital photography but to film, video, drawing, and painting. You’ll see panoramas <br />everywhere, from fine art galleries to posters to real estate. In fact, you can find <br />panoramic paintings dating back as far as the late 1800s. Artists would use this CANON A560 technique <br />to depict landscapes. Today, you may be familiar with various realtor sites that <br />allow you to see a “virtual tour” of a house or apartment over the Internet. These <br />interactive 360-degree panoramas are created the same way wide extended shots are <br />created, as shown in CANON A560. CANON A560 Images are shot in a row, as you’ll read about in a <br />moment.
