These images explore the “Tiny Planet” (Little Planet) technique applied to night and astrophotography panoramas. By transforming wide 360-degree panoramas into spherical worlds, familiar cityscapes and night skies become surreal, self-contained planets.
All images were created from original panoramic photographs using Adobe Photoshop → Filter → Distort → Polar Coordinates. This method works especially well for astrophotography, where stars, clouds, and artificial lights naturally curve into circular motion.
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| Astrophotography little planet at night polar panoramas |
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| Ladder to the Sky - Manhattan 360 Degrees Panorama polar coordinate |
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| Little Planet - Tower of David Jerusalem Israel - 360 Panorama |
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| Little Planet Brooklyn Sheepshead Bay |
These images were created from older astrophotography and night photography panoramas, giving them a new visual life through creative post-processing. The polar coordinate transformation turns horizontal space into vertical motion, making city lights, clouds, and stars appear to orbit a miniature world.
Original Images and Travel Context
The tiny planet images shown above were created from previously published astrophotography and night photography projects. You can explore the original panoramas, locations, and travel stories here:
- Urban (Manhattan) Astrophotography – original night panoramas of Manhattan, including views photographed from Brooklyn.
- Astrophotography Israel – night and astrophotography from Jerusalem, including the Tower of David.
- Brooklyn at Night – original Brooklyn night photography used for tiny planet transformations.




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