Yuv, If I have "half-a-person" on a picture, I know I don't want that in
the final picture. This is easily masked.
If I have a full person on a picture I might want to mark it as:
"please include all this", because otherwise enblend might cut of a head
or a foot. These are the red and green areas in "ptgui".
What I was suggesting is that we use the alpha mask for both of these
cases. 0.5 means: blend allowed, 0.7 means prefer this image, 0.3 means
prefer other picture, 1.0 means This image data HAS to be used (i.e.
it's an error to have another image with 1.0 alpha mask at that pixel).
I might have a 18mm pano shot from the same location as my 135mm pano.
So I'd want to prefer the pixels from the 135mm one over the ones from
the 18mm one. If I can arrange the priorities with the order, do I place
the low res one first or the high res one?
** Also affects: enblend
Importance: Undecided
Status: New
** Changed in: enblend
Importance: Undecided => Wishlist
** Changed in: enblend
Status: New => Triaged
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/679974
Title:
Allow assignment of "image priorities"
Status in Enblend:
Triaged
Status in Hugin - Panorama Tools GUI:
Triaged
Bug description:
Dear Hugin Developers,
I would love to see a feature in Hugin that allows to prioritize the usage of
certain images when stitching a panorama over others.
Rationale: When I use hugin to stitch panoramas of landscapes that have
significant details/features only in part of the whole panorama (like e.g. the
image of desert with a tower visible, that has interesting ornaments) I use
different focal lengths - short ones for the parts where little detail is to
see, and zoomed images of the parts where lots of details are to see. I guess
this is a common approach used by many users.
The problem is that while Hugin even detects and reports automatically there is
"redundant coverage" of certain image areas, there seems to be no way to tell
Hugin "Yes, I know, please prefer the long-focal-length pictures whereever
available".
I can try to workaround by using the "crop" feature to crop all the wide angle
pictures such that they do not overlap the zoomed in ones anymore, but that is
an extremely tedious task especially if there are lots of pictures to stitch
and when the difference in focal lengths is big.
I hope I haven't missed to spot an already existing feature like that, but
searching for it didn't reveal any.
Regards,
Peter Niemayer
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