If you love lots of fine detail in your photos, then you simply have to try multi-row panoramas. Essentially, the technique involves shooting the scene in a series of overlapping segments just as you would with a regular panorama. But instead of a single row you do several rows to create an entire grid of photos. The longer the lens and the wider the grid, the more resolution you can achieve. The individual images are stitched together in Photoshop or a pano stitcher like PTGui. This can give you an astonishing level of detail and allows you to make a huge print or a wall mural.
We’ll begin here by looking at the basics of multi-row panoramas, from camera settings to shooting technique. The fundamentals are simple, but it gets more advanced