It's simpler to use Include masks. 
Include the whole text of the left page on the left image 
and the whole text of the right page on the right image. 

| [ text text text  ] | [part of
| [ include mask    ] | [right page
| [ on whole text   ] | [no need to
| [ of  left page   ] | [exclude

No need to exclude mask on the right side, because the right page is 
included on the 2nd image.




On Friday, November 8, 2019 at 2:02:23 AM UTC+1, aks wrote:
>
> Yes, use masks. On image A you mask off the part of image B you do not 
> want to come from image A. On image B you mask off the part of image A you 
> do not want to come from image B. By the way, if you had multiple image As 
> and image Bs where each is a stack of the same image at different exposures 
> then you would need to use the exact same mask for the As and the exact 
> same mask for the Bs. That is when the mask copy paste ability comes in 
> handy.
>
> Regarding the sentence, depending on how many of these you need to do and 
> also how well produced the finished product needs to look, I would add in 
> the sentence with another application. The sentence text can be added with 
> an opaque background so that the new text covers up the poorly stitched 
> sentence.
>
> On Nov 7, 2019, at 4:44 PM, 'Chris H' via hugin and other free panoramic 
> software <hugi...@googlegroups.com <javascript:>> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> My first post here so hello to all!
> I have a question regarding stitching scanned images. 
> So I am scanning a book that is slightly wider than A4 so I end up with 
> two scans for every page, the left and the right scans that need to be 
> stitched.
> I came across this tutorial 
> http://hugin.sourceforge.net/tutorials/scans/en.shtml and am almost 
> there, the only problem is Hugin by default seems to be overlapping those 
> two images, so as a result if the right edge of the left scan has some 
> imperfections resulting from for example that scan not being firmly pressed 
> into the scanner along that edge, they will be reflected in the resulting 
> panorama image, obviously same thing happens if there are some 
> imperfections with the left edge of the right scan.
> But more importantly what I am scanning is a book so the written sentences 
> from both left and right image are also stitched with some kind of 
> overlapping, but after that's done the edges of the letters on the 
> resulting panorama are far from being as smooth as they are if you look at 
> each image separately.
>
> So the question... Is there a way to configure the stitcher so that 
> everything to the left of the "stitching line" would come from the left 
> image only and similarly everything to the right of the stitching line from 
> the right image only?
>
> Thanks in advance for any suggestions!
> Chris
>
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>

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