Apart from stitching in P.S. you can of course use a panorama camera: KMZ Horizon 202, Noblex (Kamera Werk Dresden) with rotating lens or a Hasselblad Xpan with wide angle lens and grey center filter to correct the fall off in the corners.
Here an example of my
Horizon 202, the photo has been made in Batenburg, the other side of the river Maas here in Ravenstein, the Netherlands. It is a ruïne of a former castle (zamek).
Shot on Kodak C-41 film, self developed in C-41 and put on RA-4 paper 90cm wide. I have a Thermaphot ACP-
252 from Germany, just over
25cm wide,
2-bath but the end can be definately very long.
For enlarging I am using a Dunco II 67 120 pro enlarger, a system with combined condensor and diffusion box.
http://www.fotohuisrovo.nl/documentatie/DUNCO_enlargers_manual.pdf For the panorama negatives I have the single glass/metal 24x65mm Dunco panorama carrier.
Apart from this the regular glassless 24x36mm carrier, 6x4,5cm, slide carrier 4x4cm and the regular 6x7cm glass/A.N. glass carrier. For B&W I am using a
Heiland Split Grade (TM) system for fast and acurate production of photos. For color I am using a
FEM-Kunze CFL-4012 color analyzer with positive densitometer for fast calibration in one action exposure time and YMC correction of the filter unit.
I am making photos and doing film development already for a pretty long time. I started in 1967 with a system from my father (Opemus 2A, Meopta, Czech Republic). At that time and in the 70's these enlargers were tremendous popular in Holland and they had a good price quality validation.
At this moment enlargers are very cheap overhere. Almost old iron prices. Only the best like Leitz V35, DeVere, Durst laborator L1200, Durst M670, M805, Kienzle or Dunco are making a few hundred Euro. The rest you can almost pick up for free.
Here the picture, hanging in a big frame over 1,05m on my working place.
