Click the center-bottom arrow and click Ok. Below that, you will see 8 arrows with a dot in the middle. Then, go to Image>Canvas Size and make the bottom figure the same as or more than the top figure. Now go to Filter>Distort>Polar coordinates and make sure that ‘Rectangular to Polar’ is selected, and press Ok. Now go to Image>Image Rotation>180, so that it is upside down. Depending on your version of Photoshop, you drag it to the bin, or just click it. You can now start the Little Planet creation process.įirst, get rid of the lock on the layer. Now that you have your panoramic image, edit it how you like-changing colors, brightness, and whatever else you normally do to your photos. You can either crop the white parts out, or use the Clone Stamp tool and press alt+click on an area to select your reference point, then simply paint over the white parts. Now right-click on the layers and press ‘Flatten Image’. Once it’s done, you will have a panorama that probably has some white parts around each edge: This will take a long time depending on your computer’s processing power, so make yourself a brew while you wait. Then, select all the exposures you took for the panorama and load them in, and click ‘Ok’. I usually end up with about 50 exposures. Now, making sure that the tripod isn’t going to move anywhere, pan around a full 360 degrees, taking a shot in portrait orientation, making sure that you overlap each shot by about 3/4 (75%). Auto-focus once and then switch it to manual, to keep the same focus. Then, set it to manual mode in order to keep the same exposure throughout the panorama. If you’re new to capturing panoramas, set your camera on a tripod and zoom all the way out to the widest angle, under 24mm is fine. Please check our pricing table to compare plans and features.360° Panorama – Busbridge Lakes by Joe Francis on 500px Photo by Wally.Ĭreate and share stunning virtual tours with Kuula, starting at only $20/month! Get Kuula PRO Get Kuula BUSINESS Here are some of the most popular tiny planets posted by our users: Photo by Tomasz Mielnik. Most popular tiny planets on Instagramįollow Kuula's Instagram account for some inspiring tiny planets and start creating them yourself with Kuula Tiny Planet Editor! Don't to forget to tag your posts #kuulapic when posting to Instagram for a chance to be featured. Image illustrating how to take a snapshot of a tiny planet to post it on Instagram. If you're on a mobile device, the saved image size is 1600 x 1600, but this is more than enough for Instagram - as it resizes the pictures to 1080 x 1080 pixels. On desktop browsers, you can save the image in high resolution - image size of 3200 x 3200. Once you saved it, you can share your tiny planet on Instagram. Finally, right click the image and choose "Save Image As.". How to share a tiny planet?įirst, click on SHARE (Step 1), then choosing SNAPSHOT (Step 2) will save the image for sharing. Once you are happy with the way your tiny planet looks, click on the SAVE button. Using sliders you can adjust the Heading, Scale (zoom), and you can add some Bulge effect to it or you can create a Rabbit Hole. Then make your tiny planet look the way you want. Image illustrating how to capture a tiny planet. All you need to do is to upload your 360 image to Kuula, go to EDIT, choose TINY PLANET and you will be right in the Tiny Planet Editor. You can turn a 360 photo into a tiny planet very easily with our Tiny Planet Editor. We regularly check our feed and feature the best shots by reposting to thousands of our followers!īelow you will find the 2 easy steps to follow to capture a tiny planet and share it on Instagram: Step 1. Then, create tiny planets using our Tiny Planet Editor and share your tiny planets on Instagram. If you would like to join our tiny planet community on Instagram, register on Kuula and start uploading your 360 photos. This kind of view became quite popular and many 360 enthusiasts started using tiny planets on Instagram. People call this technique stereographic projection. "Tiny planet" also called "little planet" is a special projection that rolls your 360 photo into a sphere that looks like a minature planet. Tiny planets look very cool! The one below, featuring The Empire State Building was created by Above Interactive and is one of our all time favourites! Photo by Above Interactive. Even though Instagram does not support 360 photos (this is what Kuula is for), you can create tiny planets of your 360 images using Kuula Tiny Planet Editor and post them on your Instagram account.
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