Sample Images
Our sample images below demonstrate the excellent image quality that is produced
by our fully automatic capturing and stitching process.
All HDR sample images provided here are unretouched and unchanged, every pixel is original
as generated by the LizardQ panoramic camera system and the LizardQ Stitcher.
Use our free
LizardQ Viewer to view the HDR sample images
on your own computer (Windows or Mac OS X).
Church
An outdoor/daylight shot that is available in all three resolution variants (100, 200 and 500 Megapixel)
Meadows
Outdoors in the summer; meadows with a small creek. The capture time of only one minute is typical of sunlit outdoor scenes in Auto/Max HDR mode. This image has been geotagged automatically.
Village at Night
A church and surroundings at night, with street lamps and facade lighting. Note how the LizardQ's two-axis motion capability enables a dedicated ceiling shot, eliminating zenith distortions that are tell-tale signs of scanning or single-axis cameras.
Florist Shop
A florist shop in Germany. Auto/Max HDR mode ensures that both the dark corners of the shop and the sunlit exterior are well exposed. The parrot's name is Coco.
Parking Deck
A top-level parking deck in full sunlight. With the exception of the sun, the dynamic range of this scene is relatively limited. In this case, LizardQ's Auto/Max mode will get you a perfectly exposed 100 Megapixel HDR image in under 20 seconds.
Tunnel
A pedestrian tunnel. Extreme contrast between the dark tunnel interior and the bright exits. This is an example of documenting masonry damage for facility management purposes. Note: The tone mapped image shown here is different from the automatically generated thumbnail JPEG image.
Church
An outdoor/daylight shot that is available in all three resolution variants (100, 200 and 500 Megapixel)
Church
An outdoor/daylight shot that is available in all three resolution variants (100, 200 and 500 Megapixel)
Sample image file formats:
HDR:
This is the native output format used by the LizardQ Stitcher.
It is also known as RADIANCE or RGBE file format.
It is widely used for storing HDR content and has the familiar *.hdr file extension.
JPEG:
This is a standard JPEG file which is automatically generated by tone mapping the HDR file.
A thumbnail image with reduced resolution is also produced.