Tuesday, September 28, 2010
Monday, September 20, 2010
2010 Charm City Cross photos

Photos from Day 1 of the 2010 Charm City Cross held in Baltimore, MD can be found in my galleries HERE. Sorry, no photos from Day 2.
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Concrete Crater Cross photos

Photos from the Concrete Crater Cross can be found in my galleries HERE. This took place Sunday September 12, 2010 on the same course as the previous day's Nittany Lion Cross, but in the opposite direction. This event was held on the grounds of the Valley Preferred Cycling Center in Trexlertown, PA. I arrived at noon, so I was unable to photograph the U19, CAT 4, and CAT 3/4 races- Sorry.
Monday, September 13, 2010
2010 Nittany Lion Cross photos

Photos are up from the 2010 Nittany Lion Cross. I was able to photograph everything except the Men's C race. Check them out in my galleries HERE.
Wednesday, September 08, 2010
2010 Philadelphia Naked Bike Ride photos
Photos from the 2nd Annual Philadelphia Naked Bike Ride can be found in my galleries and download free of charge for personal use HERE. To view the QuickTime VR Panorama below, you must have Apple QuickTime installed.
Thursday, September 02, 2010
Valley Preferred Cycling Center 360° Panorama
Several weeks ago I was shooting at the VPCC and wanted to make a 360° panorama. I picked a central location in the infield and set the camera up on a tripod with a cable-release attached to the camera to release the shutter. The pano consists of about 15 images taken at about 20° intervals. The camera was just spun around on the tripod 360° taking photos along the way.
There are basically two formats to use when creating 360° panos: Flash or QTVR (Quick Time Virtual Reality). Since I think Flash sucks, QTVR was the only way to go. I used Adobe CS5 to stitch together all 15 images to make one large .jpg. CS5 did a pretty good job. There is only one part of the pano that doesn't match up, which I believe is "user error" on my part. I then fed that .jpg into Pano2VR to make the .mov file. In order to view the file below, you must have the Apple Quick Time plugin installed in your web browser.
Make a comment and tell me if it's cool or not.
There are basically two formats to use when creating 360° panos: Flash or QTVR (Quick Time Virtual Reality). Since I think Flash sucks, QTVR was the only way to go. I used Adobe CS5 to stitch together all 15 images to make one large .jpg. CS5 did a pretty good job. There is only one part of the pano that doesn't match up, which I believe is "user error" on my part. I then fed that .jpg into Pano2VR to make the .mov file. In order to view the file below, you must have the Apple Quick Time plugin installed in your web browser.
Make a comment and tell me if it's cool or not.
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