![]() What if I stitched the 360 photo myself, or don’t know what kind of camera was used? This is the preferred method, but is much more difficult to do. If you know what you’re doing, you can re-create or copy over Photo Sphere XMP metadata. To find the original values, you can view the Exif data from an original, unedited photo taken using your 360-ready camera. The easiest way to re-tag your images for 360 treatment in Facebook is to put the original values for “Make” and “Model” back into those fields. When you edit and save a 360 photo using standard image-editing tools, the “Make” and “Model” fields (among others) could now be empty. Using eXif.er (), a free, web-based tool for viewing and editing image metadata, to look at photos taken by 360-ready cameras. If you don’t have access to exiftool, you can tag your image with Make and Model, which are fields that are able to be edited by most Exif editors that were written for photographers.As an example, let’s look at Exif information from 360 photos taken with two popular 360-ready cameras, the Ricoh Theta S and the LG 360 CAM. Injecting Make and Model Metadata into your 360 photo When you’re done editing metadata, use the web version of Facebook to do your 360 upload. # 'photo.jpg' is the photo you want to tag ![]() exiftool -ProjectionType="equirectangular" photo.jpg Most photographer-targeted Exif editors do allow the editing of the Exif XMP tag “ProjectionType,” but if you’re technical, you can use the popular command-line tool, exiftool.
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