Interesting. The other downside of doing several runs of a multi panel pano outdoors would be changes in the light and movement of shadows and clouds. This can already be a problem with single runs. I might give it a try indoors. Have you tried it yourself?
Hi,
Yes, changing light conditions will be an issue with large gigapixel scenes. The shooting order can be important, column by column or row by row, zigzag, or always left to right or right to left (depending e.g. on the movement of clouds and windspeed). Other than using cameras with lots of pixels per shot (which will reduce the number of tiles needed), I therefore usually prefer to take multiple bracketed shots per tile (usually exposure brackets for HDR scenes), instead of multiple scenes. Doing focus bracketing will require different tools, and I'm not familiar enough with the Gigapan software to know if it supports that. It also depends on the camera model if focus can be controlled easily and accurately enough for bracketing.
To avoid such issues, I may use tilt and shift lenses, but I'm currently limited to 90mm focal length. For some scenes, the tilt will allow deep DOF, but not all pano stitchers can deal with images that were optically decentered. That will amount to a lot of manual post-processing intervention on huge projects.
I'm currently not doing Gigapixel projects (I do more resolution enhanced shots of normal to slightly wide scenes/objects), but if the need arises I'll have to take the specific shooting conditions as leading me to an approach. There is no universal solution. Some scenes are 'easy' with lots of detail to (auto)focus on, others have foreground and background detail (may require manual focus brackets), others have occlusions (causing issues with fuzzy edges where DOF allows to see the background partly through solid objects in the foreground), others have featureless areas.
Cheers,
Bart