St Peters Seminary Cardross panoramic image

Introduction

Panoramic imagery from unkle75. Just a few examples of 360° panoramic image created in the past year.

All of the panoramas on this page are produced by stitching at least 14 separate images into one equirectangular image that represents a full 360 ° x 180° view.

There are a few examples of HDR (further explained in the photography section of this site) images which require 42 separate images combined to better represent the dynamic range of a scene, providing more detail between highlight and shadow.


Plug-ins

Below are a list of plugins that will enable the use of the panoramas on this page. Only one of these will need to be installed on your computer as we utilise a detection script that will serve the panoramas in the following order: flash, devalvr, java then quicktime.

At present we are developing with a bias toward flash panoramas. With 95.7% of all internet enabled desktops able to view Flash 9 content, Java 84.6% & Quicktime having 68.4% we ensure that the panoramas we create can be viewed by the majority of internet users.


  • deval vr logoInstall Deval VR - 284kb
  • flash logoInstall flash player 9 - 1457k
  • java logoInstall java 7.1mb
  • quicktime logoInstall quicktime 22.3mb

Panoramic Images

To view 360 ° panoramas click on the images below, once open left click and drag to rotate press 'shift' key to zoom in and 'ctrl' key to zoom out. Each panorama has a link to the source equirectangular image below.

The panoramas on this page vary in size, but the majority are optimised to around 1.0mb (2.22 minutes on a 56k modem, 8 secs on 1Mbps broadband). The panoramas load with a greyscale version then full colour as each section loads fully.


Interiors/Architecture

Scotland

Spain