Re: [hugin-ptx] Records office preparation

2014-05-07 Thread paul womack

T. Modes wrote:



Am Dienstag, 6. Mai 2014 14:00:27 UTC+2 schrieb bugbear:

Emad ud din Bhatt wrote:
 > Make sure to minimize camera shake. Set camera on burst continuous 
shooting mode and take each frame multiple times. Your chance to get one sharp 
image will be maximized. Another trick is to take a table stand with you. Fix 
camera on tabletop and press tabletop+dslr against your chest to get sharp images 
handheld.

Can anyone suggest an optimisation setting
that will get the measly two images in my PTO
file to align (more or less) perfectly?


First, you are using horizontal and vertical control points, so set output 
projection to rectilinear, otherwise this does not work correctly.

Second, I had some success by optimizing ypr from image 0 and ypr and 
TrXYZ+Tpy+Tpp for image 1 (you will need version 2014.0 for this). I got an 
average error of 4 and a max error of 15. Without the seeing the images, it is 
difficult to say, if this is good.


Thank you.

I will try to duplicate your result. My control points are probably within 2-3 
pixels, so I see no
(mathematical) reason not to hope for a result with a maximum error near to 
that.

   BugBear

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Re: [hugin-ptx] Records office preparation

2014-05-07 Thread paul womack

David W. Jones wrote:

On 05/05/2014 10:20 PM, paul womack wrote:

I am about to visit a record office. Their rules
permit cameras, but not tripods (let alone pano heads!)


Hmm, not even a monopod?


(chuckle) I've been looking into just how far
I can stretch their photography rules,
but I'm also looking into how good a job
I can do within their rules.

Further, record offices vary. One of them
basically says:

"No flash, since it can cause damage,
but otherwise, as long as you don't damage the
artefacts or impede other people, use what you like"

Another one says "no flash, no supports" (supports is an irksomely inclusive 
term).

 BugBear

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Re: [hugin-ptx] Records office preparation

2014-05-06 Thread David W. Jones

On 05/05/2014 10:20 PM, paul womack wrote:

I am about to visit a record office. Their rules
permit cameras, but not tripods (let alone pano heads!)


Hmm, not even a monopod?

--
David W. Jones
gnomeno...@gmail.com
wandering the landscape of god
http://dancingtreefrog.com

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Re: [hugin-ptx] Records office preparation

2014-05-06 Thread T. Modes


Am Dienstag, 6. Mai 2014 14:00:27 UTC+2 schrieb bugbear:
>
> Emad ud din Bhatt wrote: 
> > Make sure to minimize camera shake. Set camera on burst continuous 
> shooting mode and take each frame multiple times. Your chance to get one 
> sharp image will be maximized. Another trick is to take a table stand with 
> you. Fix camera on tabletop and press tabletop+dslr against your chest to 
> get sharp images handheld. 
>
> Can anyone suggest an optimisation setting 
> that will get the measly two images in my PTO 
> file to align (more or less) perfectly? 
>
>
First, you are using horizontal and vertical control points, so set output 
projection to rectilinear, otherwise this does not work correctly.

Second, I had some success by optimizing ypr from image 0 and ypr and 
TrXYZ+Tpy+Tpp for image 1 (you will need version 2014.0 for this). I got an 
average error of 4 and a max error of 15. Without the seeing the images, it 
is difficult to say, if this is good.

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Re: [hugin-ptx] Records office preparation

2014-05-06 Thread paul womack

Carlos Eduardo G. Carvalho (Cartola) wrote:

Just a fast consideration (I'm in a little rush) you could consider using a 
philopod next time. I've been using recently, even having considered it useless 
in the past, and I am pretty much satisfied now.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ouOEM4cKKGc

http://www.philohome.com/tripod/shooting.htm

The video shows a very good approach to use 4 images in a full frame camera. Here an 
example I did 
 and 
another one 
.


That's a great way to shoot a panorama, but that's not what I'm doing.

I'm trying to capture a large map spread on a desk or table.

I'm pretty happy with what my shooting technique HAS to be, since the records
office offers me little freedom.

I still cannot optimise my 2 shot example, and I simply do not understand
why. The 6 parameter model should (surely) have enough degrees
of freedom to represent my shooting conditions.

 BugBear

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Re: [hugin-ptx] Records office preparation

2014-05-06 Thread Carlos Eduardo G. Carvalho (Cartola)
Just a fast consideration (I'm in a little rush) you could consider using a
philopod next time. I've been using recently, even having considered it
useless in the past, and I am pretty much satisfied now.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ouOEM4cKKGc

http://www.philohome.com/tripod/shooting.htm

The video shows a very good approach to use 4 images in a full frame
camera. Here an example I
didand
another
one
.

Bests,


Carlos E G Carvalho (Cartola)
http://cartola.org/360
http://www.panoforum.com.br/


2014-05-06 5:20 GMT-03:00 paul womack :

> I am about to visit a record office. Their rules
> permit cameras, but not tripods (let alone pano heads!)
>
> I wish to capture the image of some 18th c maps, which are large,
> in good detail. The obvious strategy is to take multiple
> shots and stitch, but the shots will all be taken from different
> position and angles (since they'll be taken freehand).
>
> But since the maps are 2D a stitch should still be possible.
>
> I have tested this approach at home (cheating using a tripod!)
> and a road atlas.
>
> I took two photos at (fairly extreme) positions and angles
> as test/proof of concept. To ensure worst case
> testing the two shots were taken at different distances, and with
> different zooms.
>
> I have hand set 14 control points between these two images,
> and set horiz and vert controls on 1 image.
>
> I am simply failing to get a high quality stable stitch.
>
> I thought the correct approach would be to "fix" the lens for
> one image, and optimise for YPR *and* XYZ for both images.
>
> This has simply failed.
>
> I would welcome advice.
>
>BugBear
>
> --
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>

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Re: [hugin-ptx] Records office preparation

2014-05-06 Thread paul womack

paul womack wrote:

Emad ud din Bhatt wrote:

Make sure to minimize camera shake. Set camera on burst continuous shooting 
mode and take each frame multiple times. Your chance to get one sharp image 
will be maximized. Another trick is to take a table stand with you. Fix camera 
on tabletop and press tabletop+dslr against your chest to get sharp images 
handheld.


Can anyone suggest an optimisation setting
that will get the measly two images in my PTO
file to align (more or less) perfectly?


I have now tried leaving all the parameters
on my image 0 zeroed, and only optimising
the 6 positions parameters (YPR, XYZ)
on image 1. The optimisation is stable,
but the CP errors are dreadful;

average control point distance: 14.166496
standard deviation: 13.702146
maximum: 49.047939

There is clearly something about the Hugin/Panotools
model that I do not understand.

 BugBear

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Re: [hugin-ptx] Records office preparation

2014-05-06 Thread paul womack

Emad ud din Bhatt wrote:

Make sure to minimize camera shake. Set camera on burst continuous shooting 
mode and take each frame multiple times. Your chance to get one sharp image 
will be maximized. Another trick is to take a table stand with you. Fix camera 
on tabletop and press tabletop+dslr against your chest to get sharp images 
handheld.


Can anyone suggest an optimisation setting
that will get the measly two images in my PTO
file to align (more or less) perfectly?

  BugBear

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Re: [hugin-ptx] Records office preparation

2014-05-06 Thread Emad ud din Bhatt
Make sure to minimize camera shake. Set camera on burst continuous shooting
mode and take each frame multiple times. Your chance to get one sharp image
will be maximized. Another trick is to take a table stand with you. Fix
camera on tabletop and press tabletop+dslr against your chest to get sharp
images handheld.


On Tue, May 6, 2014 at 3:46 PM, paul womack  wrote:

> Bruno Postle wrote:
>
>
>> In terms of aligning in Hugin, you can get this to work, but mosaic
>> optimisation isn't as stable as normal panorama alignment; the trick
>> is to get everything nearly right with a small number of photos and as
>> few parameters as possible, then gradually add photos and optimisation
>> parameters. A good tip would be to shoot a single overall shot and use
>> this as an anchor image to align the detail photos, then delete the
>> anchor photo once you have a rough alignment.
>>
>
> I have notably failed to get a good match
> with the TWO pictures in the PTO I posted. That's
> the smallest number possible.
>
>  BugBear
>
>
> --
> A list of frequently asked questions is available at:
> http://wiki.panotools.org/Hugin_FAQ
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>
> For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
>



-- 


*Emaad*
www.flickr.com/emaad

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Re: [hugin-ptx] Records office preparation

2014-05-06 Thread paul womack

Bruno Postle wrote:



In terms of aligning in Hugin, you can get this to work, but mosaic
optimisation isn't as stable as normal panorama alignment; the trick
is to get everything nearly right with a small number of photos and as
few parameters as possible, then gradually add photos and optimisation
parameters. A good tip would be to shoot a single overall shot and use
this as an anchor image to align the detail photos, then delete the
anchor photo once you have a rough alignment.


I have notably failed to get a good match
with the TWO pictures in the PTO I posted. That's
the smallest number possible.

 BugBear

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Re: [hugin-ptx] Records office preparation

2014-05-06 Thread Bruno Postle
On 6 May 2014 09:20, paul womack  wrote:
> I am about to visit a record office. Their rules
> permit cameras, but not tripods (let alone pano heads!)
>
> I wish to capture the image of some 18th c maps, which are large,
> in good detail. The obvious strategy is to take multiple
> shots and stitch, but the shots will all be taken from different
> position and angles (since they'll be taken freehand).
>
> But since the maps are 2D a stitch should still be possible.

This can be done, I did the same with a painting that I wanted in
detail (though I had to the additional problem of having to wait for
the gallery attendant to leave the room).

The main issue is shooting handheld with insufficient or badly angled
light, see if they will let you use a flash. The other problem was
that surfaces that look flat are probably not, so try and have the
camera as perpendicular as possible, and maybe take some weights to
pull out the corners of the map.

In terms of aligning in Hugin, you can get this to work, but mosaic
optimisation isn't as stable as normal panorama alignment; the trick
is to get everything nearly right with a small number of photos and as
few parameters as possible, then gradually add photos and optimisation
parameters. A good tip would be to shoot a single overall shot and use
this as an anchor image to align the detail photos, then delete the
anchor photo once you have a rough alignment.

-- 
Bruno

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