In GRASS, one thing you can try is to normalize your data so the variations 
from scene to scene are minimized. ie, run a linear regression between 
overlapping maps and then use the coefficients to normalize one of the data 
sets. However, it is tedious and doesn't work well if the two images arn't well 
correlated to begin with.

A second option is to switch to OSSIM (another open source project) for the 
mosaicing task. It has a number of tools for feathering, blending and histogram 
matching. It's all fairly automated and straight forward to use.

A third option is enblend. It uses multi-resolution splines to blend images 
together. From my own experience, it does the best job at blending Ortho's 
together, but it's not geographically aware, which means that you need to do 
some hacking to develop a workflow that you can use to maintain/re-establish a 
spatial reference system.

--- On Mon, 2/28/11, kaipi <mapcoll...@gmx.net> wrote:

From: kaipi <mapcoll...@gmx.net>
Subject: [GRASS-user] Re: How to merge rasters using feathering/blending ?
To: grass-user@lists.osgeo.org
Received: Monday, February 28, 2011, 9:27 AM

Gimp is fine if you have a smal number of scenes but I need to process large
amounts of scenes where I need an automated way to feather the seam lines.

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