On Tue 16-Feb-2010 at 09:22 +0100, Carl von Einem wrote:
Standard (negative) masking: Make sure that certain areas of a source
image (a partial human body stepping into the frame, or parts of the
panohead) don't make it into the stitched image while you have enough
better background in another frame (e.g. a handheld nadir shot). The
'crop' tab is comparable but only allows to "mask" the outside of a
rectangle or a circle.

Positive masking: comparing two overlapping frames one feature might be
in both but looks better in frame B. You want to make sure that enblend
uses that nicer part so you can apply positive masking on that wanted part.

I uploaded some screenshots, works great, thanks for this Thomas:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/36383...@n00/4359863335/

What it shows is that by flipping a mask from 'negative' to 'positive' masking you can remove or include a person in the scene that would otherwise be cut in half.

--
Bruno

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