Panorama

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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...')
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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.

  1. Go to Edit menu > Preferences and click Graphics tab
  2. 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.
  3. Click OK.
  4. Teleport to a location you want to make a panorama of.
  5. 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.
  6. 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.
  7. Wait for the scene to fully rez in. You don't want gray or blurry textures.

Photography

  1. Use File menu > Take Snapshot.
  2. Select Save to your hard drive.
  3. Under Format, select PNG or BMP. The former saves space but will take more time on slower computers.
  4. Click Save button, create a new folder to save your first round of panoramic images to, and save it. This is your test shot.
  5. 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.
  6. In Second Life, go into Mouselook from View menu > Mouselook, or simply press "M" key when the chat bar is closed.
  7. 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