Lightroom Panorama Merge
Posted: Tue 11 Aug 2015, 10:09
This shot of Firle Beacon* and the surrounding area of Sussex is not going to win any prizes, but it provided a useful test of the new Panorama function introduced in Lightroom 6. It consists of 19 shots in portrait format which were taken on a Fuji X-Pro1 with the 18-55 lens extended to its maximum focal length. The advantage which Lightroom provides over other similar panorama merge tools is that it processes Raw files directly and produces a new Raw file which can then be processed in Lightroom. I did not have to use any other applications to produce the image.
How does Lightroom handle so many files? It was a mixed experience and my first attempt failed when Lightroom stopped responding. The 8 GB of RAM in my machine was quickly maxed out and I had to close all the other applications which were running before trying again. The Preview, which is not quite so hungry for RAM took 1:17 minutes and the actual merge was 4:06 minutes. Possibly the latter would have been quicker on a machine with more memory as mine was at its limit for most of the time, even though Lightroom was the only application which was open. CPU power was less of an issue and was rarely at 100%. At the conclusion, I had a new Raw file in DNG format with a file size of 428 MB. The image dimensions were 20,518 x 5,816 uncropped and 20,137 x 3,818 cropped.
* The summit might not look that high, but climbing it earlier on had proved quite a challenge. My wife and I had approached it from Charleston Farmhouse, famous for its association with the Bloomsbury Group**, and the path goes more or less straight up. I suspect that the route from Firle, by which we descended and where this shot was taken, might be easier.
** The least said about what went on there, the better. The BBC has just concluded a three part dramatisation of the Bloomsbury Group called "Living in Squares", which seems to echo Dorothy Parker's remark that those concerned "lived in squares and loved in triangles".
How does Lightroom handle so many files? It was a mixed experience and my first attempt failed when Lightroom stopped responding. The 8 GB of RAM in my machine was quickly maxed out and I had to close all the other applications which were running before trying again. The Preview, which is not quite so hungry for RAM took 1:17 minutes and the actual merge was 4:06 minutes. Possibly the latter would have been quicker on a machine with more memory as mine was at its limit for most of the time, even though Lightroom was the only application which was open. CPU power was less of an issue and was rarely at 100%. At the conclusion, I had a new Raw file in DNG format with a file size of 428 MB. The image dimensions were 20,518 x 5,816 uncropped and 20,137 x 3,818 cropped.
* The summit might not look that high, but climbing it earlier on had proved quite a challenge. My wife and I had approached it from Charleston Farmhouse, famous for its association with the Bloomsbury Group**, and the path goes more or less straight up. I suspect that the route from Firle, by which we descended and where this shot was taken, might be easier.
** The least said about what went on there, the better. The BBC has just concluded a three part dramatisation of the Bloomsbury Group called "Living in Squares", which seems to echo Dorothy Parker's remark that those concerned "lived in squares and loved in triangles".