Panorama
Revision as of 18:57, 31 July 2009 by Torley Linden (talk | contribs) (Created page with '{{postit|Welcome to the art of epic.}} == Preparation == Make sure to set your graphics preferences before getting started. You should be on a high-end computer that fully suppo...')
Welcome to the art of epic.
Preparation
Make sure to set your graphics preferences before getting started. You should be on a high-end computer that fully supports all of Second Life's visual effects with ease.
- Go to Edit menu > Preferences and click Graphics tab
- On the Quality and Performance slider, click Ultra.
- Optionally, check Custom and increase Draw Distance to 512 m. This may severely drop framerate.
- Also, disable Avatar Impostors — they speed up performance but look cruddy in a high-res scene.
- Click OK.
- Teleport to a location you want to make a panorama of.
- If you can't get a good enough view of your surroundings, fly 25-50 m above the terrain mesh — or even more if the environment has extremely varied heights.
- You should feel like you're in a "sweet spot" where everything around you looks wonderful and interesting: rolling hills on one side, a majestic waterfall in another direction, and assorted buildings to the north.
- Go to World menu > Environment Settings and click Environment Editor to change your WindLight/time of day setting.
- For instance, if you're at a beautiful beach, opt for a rosy sunset.
- Wait for the scene to fully rez in. You don't want gray or blurry textures.
Photography
- Use File menu > Take Snapshot.
- Select Save to your hard drive.
- Under Format, select PNG or BMP. The former saves space but will take more time on slower computers.
- Click Save button, create a new folder to save your first round of panoramic images to, and save it. This is your test shot.
- In your operating system, open that image to make sure it saved correctly. Then, you can delete the test shot.
- Torley has dual monitors and likes to keep one window open on his desktop showing thumbnails of images as he goes along.
- In Second Life, go into Mouselook from View menu > Mouselook, or simply press "M" key when the chat bar is closed.
- Start moving your mouse around and take pictures of every angle around you. Overlap is fine. Make sure you don't leave any gaps in the sky.
Advanced
It helps to