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Experience the High Definition Difference!

Our Exclusive 360HDTours Help Our El Dorado Hills Real Estate Listings Stand Out!

We provide the most advanced techniques and will place your home on the internet in a dynamic and eye catching way. Our 360HDTours allow you to look from the ground to ceiling, and all around and gives you the freedom to look around the environment, as if you're actually standing there and moving your head around. Traditional virtual tours, on the other hand, limit your field of view and do not allow you to view all the way down or all the way up.

360HDTour spherical panoramas are a way of displaying your home on the web that displays all directions at once. When viewing a spherical 360HDTour panorama on the web the image feels like you are floating in the center of a photo bubble.

Our viewing technology allows you to control what direction you look by clicking and dragging on the surface of the image to look up and down and all around.

In days past, 360 panoramas used to be tiny little images a few inches wide that weren't very impressive. Now days since most users have broadband and fast computers spherical panoramas can be easily displayed full screen.

An Important Limitation in Panoramic Photography is Dynamic Range:

On a sunny day, the contrast between objects in the shadow and sunlit objects is often too high to be captured by a camera in a single photograph. In a long exposure, shadow details will be visible, but bright areas in the image, such as the sky, will be overexposed, often completely white. By shortening the exposure time, bright areas will be exposed properly, but darker objects will turn completely black, or drown in the image noise. This limitation is apparent in particular in panoramic photography, since a panorama captures a wider scene and is more likely to contain both highlights and shadows.

High Dynamic Range (HDR) photography attempts to overcome this limitation, by combining multiple differently exposed photographs of the same scene (so called 'bracketed' exposures) into a single image.