A careful study of his surviving photographs show most of them were taken from at least six viewing points (V-1 - V-6 ) within the central buisness district of the city. At four of these points, Barnard sequentially repositioned his camera so as to take in the entire vista before him, as he might have done had he planned a panorama.

Using those photos, then, I have created four "artificial panoramas." They are seen in this section as Views 1-4. The accompanying locator map shows these separate viewpoints with yellow circles. V-1 represents View One, V-2 represents View Two, etc. Supplemental views are indicated as follows: S-4A is the first supplemental photo for View 4, S-4B is the second supplemental photo, etc. It is not known in what order Barnard took the actual photographs, which in any event appear to have been taken on separate days. Each of the false panorama images have been annotated to identify their separate photos, and each separate photo is discussed through further annotations.

The original photographs used for these purposes were extremely high resolution - on the order of more than 1 or more megabytes in size. Because of the flat focal nature of these photos, each detail is in focus relative to one another. In other words, items in the foreground are just as much in focus as artifacts in the distance. This means signage and other features are preserved, enabling scholars to identify many of these commercial buildings and research the various businesses that occupied them. In addition, I have used a simple Photoshop effect to bring these features into even sharper focus.

In examining these photographs at such detail, I believe I have found many features which have previously never been noted. My additional research has likewise turned up many details of life in Atlanta that I hope will evoke in the viewer a sense of actually being there at the time.