On Saturday, 21 September 2013 16:58:20 UTC-5, Ronald Waterbury wrote: > > I’ve just installed Hugin and am trying my first stitch job. I went > through the routine to stitch two jpeg photos but the final panoramic > output has weird colors, almost as if it were shot at night with infrared, > which it definitely was not. >
You may be experience the mysterious enblend "ciecam on by default" artefact. It started for me when the Windows binary of 2013.beta1 [the most recent precompiled windows version as far as I know] came out - I can't use enblend at all with always forcing "--no-ciecam". I'm a bit surprised there are more people wondering about this, as finding the workaround was not easy [one post on one listserv on the entire net as far as google was concerned at the time] and the rendered output is usually total garbage [nearly pitch-dark or with the strangest gamma curve I've ever seen applied on purpose] without this option disabled [and the linux version does exactly the same for me, too]. I suspected that in my case it might be occurring because I shoot RAW with my camera set to use the AdobeRGB colour profile rather than sRGB [then use 16-bit TIFFs output from Lightroom or RawTherapee].. although even when I shoot sRGB or convert profiles before images reach Hugin, it still does it 100% of the time since beta1. Are you doing the same or similar? Before rendering, open Hugin's preferences and go to the "programs" tab. In the "Enblend" section add "--no-ciecam" to the default arguments. Then try rendering and see if it's better or worse. Cheers, D -- A list of frequently asked questions is available at: http://wiki.panotools.org/Hugin_FAQ --- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "hugin and other free panoramic software" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to hugin-ptx+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/hugin-ptx/3ce976ef-7f26-4d17-8d4f-c4f88d74ab3f%40googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.