Interesting idea, karmadillo.

On Nov 7, 5:32 pm, Karmadillo <directrix.digi...@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Nov 4, 3:07 pm, JohnPW <johnpwatk...@gmail.com> wrote:> In an earlier post 
> Robert Krawitz was sharing some nice panoramas he
> > did:http://www.google.com/url?sa=D&q=http://rlk.smugmug.com/Other/Landsca...
> > andhttp://www.google.com/url?sa=D&q=http://rlk.smugmug.com/Other/Landsca...
>
> > and mentioned that he needed to do some "hand adjustments" in Gimp to
> > correct some stitching problems
> > It occurred to me, so how do folks do their "hand adjustments?" . . .
>
> Clone stamp tool. Its worth trying the lighter/darker colour,
> luminance, saturation and colour brush options for this.
> For misalignment visible on staight edges (horizons, power lines, man-
> made structures)  I bend the image using skew.
> Sometimes content aware fill if there is a piece of the image missing.
> This works quite well for sky.
>
>
>
> > I have some images I recently took handheld on a small yacht sailing
> > in San Francisco Bay. I had to put all the control points on
> > stationary parts of the boat since anything else was in constant
> > motion. It has made me want to do more hand blending and masking to
> > make the (very mismatched) horizon less jarring and to fix a few
> > things on the boat that moved. I was considering how best to do it.
>
> > I have yet to try it, but I was thinking I should output the pano in
> > two parts to, one with the even images and one with the odd (alternate
> > source images so there is no image overlap between any of the source
> > images within each one of the two panos.) My thought is that I can
> > then combine the two panos as two base layers in a new file to make
> > the complete combined pano. Anybody have any helpful thoughts?
>
> How about splitting the project into two parts?
> Use Save as to save 2 new projects.
> The first one will be a stitch of the boat only. Mask out all the sea
> and sky to isolate the boat. Then from the edit menu select Remove all
> control points from masks. Remove any images that have no boat
> visible. Align, Save and stitch.
> In the other, mask out the boat and Remove all control points from
> masks. Align, Save and stitch
> The objective is to obtain 2 panos which don't have any obvious seams
> or misalignments.
> In an image editor, combine the two images. To get them to fit in the
> right orientation, you may need to move the boat image around using
> the Roll pitch yaw adjustment in the Hugin preview pane, and re-
> stitch.
> When editing, you may need to clone in some sea to cover gaps. However
> sea is not somewhere people will notice retouching.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > <cartol...@gmail.com> wrote:
> > > Hi John,
>
> > > in fact I use many many ways to blend. I use normal hugin automated blend,
> > > I generate remapped images and put them as a layer in GIMP to use the
> > > pieces I want, I guess you can imagine your way and test it. Testing will
> > > give you the experience you are searching for.
>
> > > Cheers,
>
> > > Carlos E G Carvalho (Cartola)http://cartola.org/360

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