Hearst Mining Building, U. C. Berkeley
I made this photograph on July 11, 2013 in the Hearst Memorial Mining Building at U. C. Berkeley, where I went to college and where my daughter just graduated. This building was completed in 1907, built with money donated by Phoebe Apperson Hearst, in memory of her husband, George Hearst, who died in 1891. The architect was John Galen Howard.
For this image I used 2 Sigma DP1 digital cameras mounted next to each other on a panoramic device I constructed which allows the cameras to rotate up or down around what is called the entrance pupil of the lens. This enabled me to tilt the cameras slightly downward to make one part of the image, then slightly upward to make the other part of the image. I blended the two parts of the image together using a computer program called Panorama Tools Graphic User Interface (PTGUI for short). The exposures were 1/13 second at f/8 (ISO 50). The lens is the 35mm equivalent of 28mm. You can see the image in the format you prefer by clicking on one of the following: parallel, cross-eyed, or anaglyph (red/cyan glasses).
For this image I used 2 Sigma DP1 digital cameras mounted next to each other on a panoramic device I constructed which allows the cameras to rotate up or down around what is called the entrance pupil of the lens. This enabled me to tilt the cameras slightly downward to make one part of the image, then slightly upward to make the other part of the image. I blended the two parts of the image together using a computer program called Panorama Tools Graphic User Interface (PTGUI for short). The exposures were 1/13 second at f/8 (ISO 50). The lens is the 35mm equivalent of 28mm. You can see the image in the format you prefer by clicking on one of the following: parallel, cross-eyed, or anaglyph (red/cyan glasses).