On Sunday, 10 September 2017 at 18:13:17 -0700, HISEROD wrote:
>  @Brianlnnes: Fireflies are very bright pixels in seemingly random places
> commonly seen in ray traced renders, you can see them and the gradients in
> the attached file.

Please don't post images here.  It also doesn't help: what people
would want to see are the input images and a description of how you
processed them, possibly including the .pto file.

> @Groogle: I'm not certain what that script is for. But I am using
> Microsoft, so I guess it doesn't matter?

Step back a bit, and you'll get more out of this exchange.  I don't
understand your use of @ signs, but they're out of place here, and
you've lost your context.  Let's try again:

> On Sunday, 10 September 2017 at  9:55:42 +1000, Greg 'groggy' Lehey wrote:
>> On Saturday,  9 September 2017 at  9:38:16 -0700, HISEROD wrote:
>>>
>>>      I've been trying my best to create HDRi's in hugin for about a month
>>> now, and I still have many problems. For one whenever I blend in the far
>>> under exposed images I get fireflies in the blended panorama, and whenever
>>> I remove the unnecessary ones I get odd black gradients.
>>
>> It would be interesting to see how you do this.

You seem to have missed this.

>> I create HDR images on a regular basis with a script that you can
>> find at http://www.lemis.com/grog/src/HDR
>>
>> It's relatively long, but the payload is at the end:
>>
>>   nice align_image_stack -a $TMP $FILES
>>   nice enfuse -o $RESULT $TMP*
>>
>> It should work essentially "as is" on most systems, but not Microsoft.
>
> I'm not certain what that script is for.

As I said,

>> I create HDR images on a regular basis with a script that you can
>> find at http://www.lemis.com/grog/src/HDR

So it's for creating HDR images.

> But I am using Microsoft, so I guess it doesn't matter?

No, it means that the script won't work for you.  You will have more
work ahead of you.  Assuming that you don't write Microsoft scripts on
a regular basis, the easiest would be just to type in the commands.
Assuming you have three images view-1-1.jpeg, view-1-3.jpeg and
view-1-3.jpeg (what gets called FILES in the script), and you want to
create an output file view-1.jpeg (called RESULT in the script), you
could write:

   nice align_image_stack -a view-1-tmp view-1-*.jpeg
   nice enfuse -o view-1.jpeg view-1-tmp*

You'll then need to remove the -tmp files.  Of course, if you can find
a way to write a script, this will greatly simplify your life.

Greg
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