DIY Panorama plate/head
Posted: Sun Nov 21, 2004 4:37 pm
Hopefully some of you may find this interesting.
I have recently upgraded from a sony F707 to a D70, and I thought i'd give shooting panoramas another bash. So i went out, shot a shedload of frames and came home to stitch them, boy did I struggle!
If anyone is familiar with a F707 you'll know that the tripod mount is on the lens barrel, where the D70 is on the body, so I did some reading and came accross the whole entry pupil/nodal point concept.
Having just dropped over 2 large on the camera i am in no position to run out and replace my $70 el-budget tripod and buy panoramic heads and mounts, so I knocked up a DIY panoramic plate and mount, I think the total cost was well under $20, although I did have a piece of aluminium to use as the bottom plate.
Basically all you need is a piece of steel/aluminium that is sturdy enough to hold the camera and at-least 120 mm long if you want to shoot at 18mm on the kit lens.
As you can see with mine I opted for more length and a channel so I can change the focal length and adjust the camera position.
Unfortuatley my tripod does not rotate over the mounting screw, but its a bit skewed so the numbers i give you here may vary on your tripod but my camera is mounted 70mm to the back of the plate's mounting screw.
You can quite easily add a right angle bracket (picked this one up from Mitre 10 for under $4).
Its all fairly straight forward and it fixes the dreaded movement of objects in the background when you rotate.
I have recently upgraded from a sony F707 to a D70, and I thought i'd give shooting panoramas another bash. So i went out, shot a shedload of frames and came home to stitch them, boy did I struggle!
If anyone is familiar with a F707 you'll know that the tripod mount is on the lens barrel, where the D70 is on the body, so I did some reading and came accross the whole entry pupil/nodal point concept.
Having just dropped over 2 large on the camera i am in no position to run out and replace my $70 el-budget tripod and buy panoramic heads and mounts, so I knocked up a DIY panoramic plate and mount, I think the total cost was well under $20, although I did have a piece of aluminium to use as the bottom plate.
Basically all you need is a piece of steel/aluminium that is sturdy enough to hold the camera and at-least 120 mm long if you want to shoot at 18mm on the kit lens.
As you can see with mine I opted for more length and a channel so I can change the focal length and adjust the camera position.
Unfortuatley my tripod does not rotate over the mounting screw, but its a bit skewed so the numbers i give you here may vary on your tripod but my camera is mounted 70mm to the back of the plate's mounting screw.
You can quite easily add a right angle bracket (picked this one up from Mitre 10 for under $4).
Its all fairly straight forward and it fixes the dreaded movement of objects in the background when you rotate.