

The Panorama Module

Tim Parkin
Tim Parkin is a British landscape photographer, writer, and editor best known as the co-founder of On Landscape magazine, where he explores the art and practice of photographing the natural world. His work is thoughtful and carefully crafted, often focusing on subtle details and quiet moments in the landscape rather than dramatic vistas. Alongside his photography and writing, he co-founded the Natural Landscape Photography Awards, serves as a judge for other international competitions. Through all these projects, Parkin has become a respected and influential voice in contemporary landscape photography.

Joe Cornish
Professional landscape photographer.
In this Lightroom installment we're taking a quick look at the panorama module. Our results in trying out this module have generally been OK but it isn't as robust as using Photoshop and as can be seen from these examples it can get things dramatically wrong. Then again so can a dedicated panorama app such as PTGUI - although the advantage in PTGUI is its flexibility and controllability. For most panoramas with good originals with decent overlap and lots of detail, Lightroom will do an excellent job with little user intervention and it will produce panoramas that have all the flexibility of a raw file (which is more than can be said for Photoshop).
Here are the components and final panoramas for the examples used in the video
Saltwick
Here's Joe's components from our Saltwick trip
And here's the vertical panorama generated in Lightroom
Iceland
Here's one of Tim's panoramas from Myvatn, Iceland
And here's the resulting panorama generated by Photoshop (Lightroom failed by ignoring the central image)