Hi all,
My name is Steven Williams and I am in my fourth year studying
mathematics at Walla Walla University. I just saw the GSoC advert and
thought Hugin would be a fun thing to work on this summer. I have been
using the program for a few years now and have a Canon Digital Rebel
XTi. Several of
On Thu, Apr 7, 2011 at 8:13 PM, Christopher Allen cpcal...@gmail.com wrote:
On Apr 7, 2011 6:15 PM, Yclept Nemo orbisvi...@gmail.com wrote:
RAW images are in linear color space so hugin would
not have to reverse-calculate the response curve applied by
ufraw/dcraw.
Is that generally true? I
By the way, whats the difference between vertical control point lines
and horizontal control point lines? And is it useful to have these
lines across different images (ie horizontal lines would take care of
pitch while CPs would take care of roll)
Also the documentation says straight control
Mikolaj -
Great to learn you are keen on improving
Enblend!
On Apr 7, 4:33 pm, Rosomack leszczynski.miko...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm interested in improving the seam-finding algorithm in Enblend (or
more specifically - writing a new one). I found the topic on one
of the ideas pages,
On 8 April 2011 09:38, Yclept Nemo orbisvi...@gmail.com wrote:
Yes I did manage to borrow a panoramic head; even without out, since
the lightpost is about 50-75 feet distance I doubt parallax would
cause any problems.
It should be straight-forward to calculate the maximum parallax error
(in
Am 08.04.2011 10:43, schrieb Yclept Nemo:
By the way, whats the difference between vertical control point lines
and horizontal control point lines?
- http://wiki.panotools.org/Horizontal_control_points
- http://wiki.panotools.org/Vertical_control_points
-
yes, I really enjoyed it. its really impressive work done.
Jeffery what are technical details of equipment (camera, lens etc) used for
it? How you calculated exposure for such a huge mosaic.
On Tue, Mar 29, 2011 at 7:34 PM, Jeffrey Martin 360cit...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Everybody,
Just
Am 08.04.2011 03:18, schrieb Tduell:
I would like to be able to locate a control point in each of a pair
of remapped images.
Is there a way of extracting the coordinates from Hugin?
Wasn't pano_trafo made for this?
--
Erik Krause
http://www.erik-krause.de
--
You received this message
Erik Krause wrote:
Am 08.04.2011 10:43, schrieb Yclept Nemo:
By the way, whats the difference between vertical control point lines
and horizontal control point lines?
- http://wiki.panotools.org/Horizontal_control_points
- http://wiki.panotools.org/Vertical_control_points
-
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thanks for the suggestions:
Just to be clear, the problem is not in my control points. I have 24
stacks with 50% overlap, per overlap I've manually placed 20-40
high-correlation well-distributed accurate control points. After
optimizing my average error is 0.4, rms error 0.6, max error 1.7.
The
On 2011-04-08 10:35 AM, paul womack wrote:
whats the difference between vertical control point lines and horizontal
control point lines?
- http://wiki.panotools.org/Horizontal_control_points
- http://wiki.panotools.org/Vertical_control_points
-
Hi Bruno,
Am 07.04.2011 20:20, schrieb Bruno Postle:
On Wed 06-Apr-2011 at 23:54 -0700, Jeffrey Martin wrote:
If I knew what a standard response curve looked like as EMoR parameters
then I would suggest that Hugin used it as a default.
Currently we use 0,0,0,0,0 which doesn't correspond to
Important: Horizontal, vertical, and straight lines are evaluated on their
output projection.
Hm, so that's why my mercator projection + straight line @ ~25° was
throwing off the alignment...
so this means that:
equirectangular: vertical lines only, plus horizon line
Does this also apply to
Am 08.04.2011 19:46, schrieb Yclept Nemo:
I aligned the
camera's sensor plane with the panoramic head's center of rotation
It is very unlikely the entrance pupil of your lens coincides with the
sensor plane. The no-parallax-point (NPP) is located at the center of
the entrance pupil. If you
My name is Lukasz Maliszewski. I am a last year Informatics student
from the Technical University of Gdansk in Poland, Faculty of
Electronics, Telecommunications and Informatics.
My GsoC proposal:
My idea is to implenet Thin Plate spline.
Thin Plate Spline lets to deform image in an unlimited
On Fri 08-Apr-2011 at 20:21 +0200, Pablo d'Angelo wrote:
Am 07.04.2011 20:20, schrieb Bruno Postle:
If I knew what a standard response curve looked like as EMoR parameters
then I would suggest that Hugin used it as a default.
Currently we use 0,0,0,0,0 which doesn't correspond to any real
Hi,
I managed to set up my workspace today, with the instructions on the
page it was a breeze.
I test-built both Enblend and Hugin, no problems.
I'm going to familiarize myself with the code tomorrow and produce a
patch after that.
Some family business going on this weekend, so it might take a
On Fri, 08 Apr 2011 22:48:48 +1000, Erik Krause erik.kra...@gmx.de wrote:
Am 08.04.2011 03:18, schrieb Tduell:
I would like to be able to locate a control point in each of a pair
of remapped images.
Is there a way of extracting the coordinates from Hugin?
Wasn't pano_trafo made for this?
On Sat 09-Apr-2011 at 08:30 +1000, Terry Duell wrote:
On Fri, 08 Apr 2011 22:48:48 +1000, Erik Krause erik.kra...@gmx.de wrote:
Am 08.04.2011 03:18, schrieb Tduell:
I would like to be able to locate a control point in each of a pair
of remapped images.
Is there a way of extracting the
Hullo Bruno,
On Sat, 09 Apr 2011 08:38:48 +1000, Bruno Postle br...@postle.net wrote:
Wasn't pano_trafo made for this?
I have tried pano_trafo and it puts out pano coords, not the coords of
the remapped image.
There is a pano_trafo -r option that should reverse the transformation.
Not
On Sat 09-Apr-2011 at 08:44 +1000, Terry Duell wrote:
On Sat, 09 Apr 2011 08:38:48 +1000, Bruno Postle br...@postle.net wrote:
There is a pano_trafo -r option that should reverse the transformation.
Not sure how that would help.
I can get control point coords from each image of a pair, then
Hullo Bruno,
On Sat, 09 Apr 2011 08:58:05 +1000, Bruno Postle br...@postle.net wrote:
The panorama coordinates should be the same as the remapped images
coordinates, or will be unless you have cropped TIFF output set.
I'm not using cropped TIFF output...or didn't think I was.
When I tried
On Sat, 09 Apr 2011 09:05:12 +1000, Terry Duell tdu...@iinet.net.au
wrote:
Hullo Bruno,
When I tried pano_trafo the x coords being returned were way outside the
range of those of each of the remapped images.
Maybe I'm having another bad day and misunderstood what I was seeing,
I'll try
Ah well! I have Ø symbol printed on the side of my Canon EOS 350, I
was told this was the NPP point... as you pointed out, likely not.
http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/CanonEOS350D/Images/allroundview.jpg
Top right view, above the strap slit. Anyone know what this point marks?
--
You received
I don't know if this is related, but the luxrender project recently
added film response curves intended to emulate various cameras during
tonemapping
Here are some details (read down the topic)
http://www.luxrender.net/forum/viewtopic.php?f=12t=5456
And a link to the CRF files:
On Apr 9, 9:31 am, Terry Duell tdu...@iinet.net.au wrote:
pano_trafo is definitely returning coords from the point in the stitched
pano, not the coords in the remapped image.
Ooops, my mistake. The 'Create cropped images by default' was set.
With that switch not set, I now get remapped
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