651-483-1557
I'm Ed Fink, and these are my 360 degree panoramas. I was the first VR photographer in the world to do fullscreen 360° panoramas from a helicopter. Today I'm a FAA licensed drone pilot and shoot most of my aerials with a quadcopter.
I'm also a Google Street View Trusted Photographer in Minneapolis shooting Street View tours inside local businesses.
I publish thousands of 360 degree panoramas and virtual tours to Google Maps, where I currently have over 40 MILLION VIEWS.
Take a look below at some of my Google tours, or go to my Google Street View page for more information and many samples.
I want to partner with you to offer Google Street View virtual tours to your clients! Google hosts the tour in Google Maps, but you're needed to also embed the tour in your client's web pages, blog, or Facebook.
Email or call 651-483-1557
My 360 degree panoramas are the absolute best way to show off your vehicle interiors. The fisheye lens perspective makes even small areas seem spacious, and the technology itself dazzles everyone who sees it. Panoramas show your potential customers everything inside your vehicle in a most impressive way.
Why haven’t you seen many of these fullscreen panoramas before? Simple. The technology is new. These high resolution fullscreen panoramas just weren’t possible until recently.
You can be sure you’ll see more and more of my 360 degree panoramas. Your competitors are looking at this same ad, and the ones who care about making a good impression and projecting an image of quality and luxury are going to order panoramas of all their vehicle interiors. If you take a look at one of my vehicle panoramas you’ll see why.
360 degree panorama inside an MTC bus filled with an odd assortment of fairy tale characters from the Holidazzle Parade.
Equipment: NikonD70, Sigma 8mm, Kaidan QuickPan III
Categories: Different, Holidazzle Parade, Vehicles
360 degree panorama of the interior of a Lincoln Town car.
Equipment: Nikon D70, Sigma 8mm
Categories: Vehicles
360 degree panorama inside Cities Limousine and Transportation’s 2005 BMW 745Li 1-3 passenger Luxury Sedan.
Equipment: NikonD70, Sigma 8mm, Kaidan QuickPan III
Categories: Vehicles
360 degree panorama of the interior of my Ford Econoline Van, taken as a test to see if I could do a panorama in such tight quarters.
It was good practice - my next car shot was the interior of a Lincoln Town Car, considerably smaller than this van!
Equipment: Nikon D70, Sigma 8mm
Categories: Vehicles
360 degree panorama of Cities Limousine and Transportation’s 2005 BMW 745Li Luxury Sedan parked on First Avenue in front of Bellanotte, across from Target Center in downtown Minneapolis.
Equipment: NikonD70, Sigma 8mm, Kaidan QuickPan III
Categories: Minneapolis, Vehicles
360 degree panorama with Lincoln Town Car across from Target Center in downtown Minneapolis, MN.
Equipment: Nikon D70, Sigma 8mm
Categories: Minneapolis, Vehicles
Start with the "Featured" category to see an assortment of my most interesting panoramas.
Select a panorama category:
VISITOR COMMENTS:
"That's the coolest thing on the web."
"You brought tears to my eyes."
"Mind blowing."
"One of the neatest photo sites I've ever seen."
"I'm afraid of heights and when I looked straight down I nearly threw up!"
"I am stunned by the quality and possible applications, nice job."
"That combo of eye-in-the-sky with eyes on the ground is fantastic."
"I sent this to every pilot I know."
"HOW IS THIS EVEN POSSIBLE?!"
"The 360 shots are almost unbelieveable!!!!"
"Oh my gosh Ed - they are just beautiful."
"That aerial panorama over Lake Calhoun is totally awesome"
"FANTASTIC!!!!"
"I've instantly become a fan of your panorama photos!"
"Wow, your panoramas are like nothing I have ever seen before. Very impressive!"
"the absolute best I have seen anywhere."
"ED - I am not surprised by all the comments you have received. The VR is AWESOME!"
Now I only shoot interactive 360° panoramas, but long ago I photographed rock concerts (and almost anything else!) for fun and profit. Here's a few of my concert photos and a story about shooting a 1981 Rolling Stones concert.