Who doesn't love a good panoramic shot - this phone technology is perfect for capturing gorgeous meadows, hilltops or colorful deserts. Still landscapes can be captured with ease at just a touch of a button and scan with a steady hand - but what happens when you want to photograph an object that has a little bit more trouble sitting still - like your precious pets - well, you end up with a creature that has eight legs, two heads, and six tails!
It turns out that there are tons of panoramic pictures of these 'mythical' animals all over the internet- from limo horses to Cerberus dogs and multiple-legged cats, this photo technology seems to have no mercy when it comes to eerily disfiguring our beloved pets. Of course, without any fault of these innocent animals who just cannot seem to hold a pose or want to photobomb.
In the list below compiled by Bored Panda, you'll find the greatest panoramic pictures of animals. Each one of these funny fails is so unique that even the greatest imagination couldn't fathom these kooky beasts. So, sit back, relax, warm up those abdominal muscles and get ready for some hearty laughs. Also, don't forget to vote and comment on the most unexpected funny photos!
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Don't Worry Your Dog Could Have Been Like Mine
For millennials perhaps the earliest memory we having of getting anything close to a "panoramic" shot on film was to turn the camera from vertical to horizontal, but panoramic photography goes all the way back to the first invention of photography itself in 1839. There was a desire to show the landscapes of cities, so photographers invented the first panoramas by placing two or more daguerreotype plates - the earliest photos set on copper plates- side by side to create the illusion. It is said that the first panoramas were made up of eleven plates.
Panorama Doggo Gone Wrong
Pano Of My New Backyard When My Dog Decided To Run Through It
Some of the earliest panoramas were created during the civil wart, taken by George Barnard for the Union Army. They were printed from two or more wet-plate negatives that had been exposed in a conventional camera. The wet-plates were coated with an emulsion, sensitized and exposed.The camera was rotated to the next section of the panorama after each exposure in order to make a new negative, When the negatives reached the studio they were placed on a sensitized sheet of photographic paper and placed in the sun. Next they were fixed, washed, trimmed and arranged for the panoramic finished photograph.
Cats Have Adapted To Living In The Desert
Split Kitty
In the late 19th century they began to manufacture cameras created specifically for producing panoramas. The cameras either had a swing-lens, in which the lens would rotate while the film remained stationary or 360-degree rotation cameras, where both the camera and the film rotated. The first mass produced panoramic camera was the Al-Vista, introduced in 1898. Most mass-produced panoramic cameras used a swing lens.
Mum Can’t Stop Laughing. Dad Must Have Pulled A Funny Face Or Something
Duck Limo Service, Anyone?
In 1904 a large format film camera called the Cirkut was patented. The film ranged from 5" to 16" and could produce 360-degree photographs that measured up to 20 feet long. During the exposure process the camera and the film rotated on a special tripod. These special cameras were most commonly used by commercial photographers who wanted to capture city views or special events.
New Species?
Panorama Of A Dog Goes Terribly Wrong
It may seem like a huge leap to imagine a time where you had to manually stitch together photos to create a panorama to now where your phone camera can work the magic for you - but how does it do it? Well it stitches the photos together for you like the old days just with better technology, less effort and no wait time. Your phone looks for common features on the edge of each image transparency, lines them up by sliding and rotating, moving image by image until it has created the "perfect" panorama. Unlike the human brain, your phone can not determine photo content and sometimes uses what's known as brute-force computation to find similar features The result is stitching errors such as distorted images, misalignment or cutting things in half.
Kangaroo Dog In Full Flight
The most common stitching errors during panoramic shots are: not enough overlap between frames, distortion caused by poor lens quality or close objects in overlap zone, parallax error, when close objects change position during frames (like a moving pet), lack of visible features, highly repetitive features, or bad software. Worse case scenario you get a photo worthy for a modern art display!
My Buddy Tried To Photograph His Dog In Panoramic Mode
Giraffe Walking While I Was Taking A Panoramic Photo
Poor Kitty
Three Times The Happiness
The Dog Became Psychedelic
That's A Long Snout
I’m Never Drinking Again
My Dog Is... One Head Short Of Cerberus
He Never Barks
Panorama Fail
Ermegerd, Ma Derg
What?! I was trying to keep my eye on the ball, like you told me to.
When You Are Trying To Take Pictures Of Your House And Your Six Legged Cat Shows Up
Really Long Tail
When The Panorama Option Makes Your Dogs Look Like Sonic The Hedgehog
When I Tried To Take A Panorama Of A Horse
When Panorama Goes Wrong
Ayllon's Sheeps Are Different. So Different
I Hear Everything
Google Assistant Seemed Oddly Excited About This Panorama That It Created For Me
"Never before documented, but finally unveiled. Asexual reproduction in dogs. You can clearly see the later stages of the divison phase, where all feature have already duplicated the the two new individuals slowly morph apart. Undoubtedly, they are perfect genetic copies although the split not neccesarily leads to an identifcal composition."
Meet Milo, My 11-Headed Dog
This post made me realise something... I need to start making panoramas of my pets!
Hilarious - I had to stop looking because it made me laugh and I'm in hospital recovering from abdominal surgery. I'll have to save it for later.
My daughter is asleep next to me, and the self control im using mot to burst out laughing is yuge!
Omg! I laughed so hard I cried! What happened though? There were 60 photos earlier but now there are only 30. I
Excellent. I don't remember laughing so hard for a long time. Thanks a lot for the post!
OMG! Thank you for this laughs... I dont remember last time I was laughing so hard my belly hurts!!! I dont know why this is so funny, it just is :D
These were sure funny!! Might have to give it try and see what I get!
Can we all agree that many of the photos are not panoramic but Pokemons?
These are great. I have a panoramic photo of our delSol car club meet in Vegas at the Red Rock, everyone was still as I was take the photo, except for one guy. He has an elongated arm with his hand trying to give his phone to someone and deformed right leg. It’s hilarious.
The text about the technology isn’t correct. It’s not stitching images that’s causing this. It’s the way the image is created column by column of pixels as you move the camera over the scene you’re photographing (usually left to right). That’s why this results in stretched objects that were in motion (the animal moves with you half way through the pano, and then stops before you stop moving the phone, resulting in a stretched animal). You’ll get the same effect on cars if they drive by while you’re doing the shot. It’s very similar (if not identical) to a special effect used in the 70s for psychedelic visuals in movies called “slitscan” (used in the end sequence of 2001 and for the classic Doctor Who series intro, starting with Jon Pertwee’s last season and ending before Tom Baker’s last season). Wikipedia: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slit-scan_photography ... and YouTube: https://m.youtube.com/results?search_query=Slitscan
To make a bored panda article, of course
Load More Replies...This post made me realise something... I need to start making panoramas of my pets!
Hilarious - I had to stop looking because it made me laugh and I'm in hospital recovering from abdominal surgery. I'll have to save it for later.
My daughter is asleep next to me, and the self control im using mot to burst out laughing is yuge!
Omg! I laughed so hard I cried! What happened though? There were 60 photos earlier but now there are only 30. I
Excellent. I don't remember laughing so hard for a long time. Thanks a lot for the post!
OMG! Thank you for this laughs... I dont remember last time I was laughing so hard my belly hurts!!! I dont know why this is so funny, it just is :D
These were sure funny!! Might have to give it try and see what I get!
Can we all agree that many of the photos are not panoramic but Pokemons?
These are great. I have a panoramic photo of our delSol car club meet in Vegas at the Red Rock, everyone was still as I was take the photo, except for one guy. He has an elongated arm with his hand trying to give his phone to someone and deformed right leg. It’s hilarious.
The text about the technology isn’t correct. It’s not stitching images that’s causing this. It’s the way the image is created column by column of pixels as you move the camera over the scene you’re photographing (usually left to right). That’s why this results in stretched objects that were in motion (the animal moves with you half way through the pano, and then stops before you stop moving the phone, resulting in a stretched animal). You’ll get the same effect on cars if they drive by while you’re doing the shot. It’s very similar (if not identical) to a special effect used in the 70s for psychedelic visuals in movies called “slitscan” (used in the end sequence of 2001 and for the classic Doctor Who series intro, starting with Jon Pertwee’s last season and ending before Tom Baker’s last season). Wikipedia: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Slit-scan_photography ... and YouTube: https://m.youtube.com/results?search_query=Slitscan
To make a bored panda article, of course
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