On 25 Mrz., 02:37, Andy <[email protected]> wrote: > I want to use Hugin to make a detailed picture of an object; I have > one photo of the whole thing, and a matrix of zoomed-in photos > supplying the detail of the surface.
You have to be more specific here. Are all your images taken from the same spot? (the NPP of the lens in the same place for every shot) - in this case you can use standard panorama technique. If the images are taken from different spots and your 'thing' is flat, you are making a 'mosaic', which is more involved. If the 'thing' you photograph isn't flat and your images are taken from different spots, you can't do what you want to do with hugin because of parallax. In this last case you'll need other techniquest like 3D reconstruction. If your image set qualifies, you have to have the correct fov (field of view) set for each of the shots, and assuming all your zoomed-in shots are done with the same setting (fov), you can use one lens number for them - only when they are actually done with different settings you have to use different lenses as Terry proposed. > I want to use the main photo as a > guide for perspective, and have Hugin blend in the detail which is > available in each of the other photos. At the moment, if I use it the > normal way and I try to add control points to tell it where on the > main photo each sub-photo is, the control point matching fails because > the zoom factor is wrong. In my experience, if the fov is set correctly, you will get CPs between different lens shots as long as the lengths aren't too far apart (provided there is no parallax) - you may have to play with cpfind's parameters a bit (try --fullscale). The different zoom factor doesn't matter as long as your images have the right EXIF data or you set the fov correctly manually. Once you've got the images roughly lines up, you can refine the panorama with the 'woa' plugin, provided you have a python-enabled build. By the way - using a 'guide' photo should be quite unnecessary. If your individual detail shots overlap sufficiently and are taken from the same spot (or of a flat object), cpfind needs no guidance to stitch them together. Kay -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Hugin and other free panoramic software" group. A list of frequently asked questions is available at: http://wiki.panotools.org/Hugin_FAQ To post to this group, send email to [email protected] To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected] For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/hugin-ptx
