4. Last and least: How would you do it? What is your advice to me?
I got a pretty good result by doing the following:
Load the images into Hugin, and set an approximate HFOV (I used 45 degrees)
and a projection of equirectangular
Create some control points - I used Create control points on the
Actually, having said all that, I now find that when dragging the images
around in the GL viewer, they don't stay fixed together as I was expecting
them to, so maybe I'm entirely wrong to suggest doing it that way!
--
A list of frequently asked questions is available at:
Hi,
I'd like to find out how I can manually blend remapped images from hugin in
photoshop. The problem I am facing for this is that the remapped images use the
TIFF cropping feature as explained in [1]. This is not supported by photoshop.
Is there any known (command line) utility to blow up
They are only generated cropped if this hugin is set to. You can change it
on each hugin project or in the global preferences. The default is cropped.
At the Stitcher tab you can unselect the Save cropped images option at
the Processing / Remapper / Nona / Options.
At the File / Preferences
On Jun 5, 2014 2:35 PM, Johannes Wienke wrote:
Is there any known (command line) utility to blow up the cropped TIFFs to
full ones again?
There is a tool in libpano13 called PTuncrop, you should already have it as
part of your Hugin installation.
--
Bruno
--
A list of frequently asked
On 05.06.14 16:02 schrieb Carlos Eduardo G. Carvalho (Cartola):
They are only generated cropped if this hugin is set to. You can change it
on each hugin project or in the global preferences. The default is cropped.
At the Stitcher tab you can unselect the Save cropped images option at
the
Hi,
On 05.06.14 16:23 schrieb Bruno Postle:
On Jun 5, 2014 2:35 PM, Johannes Wienke wrote:
Is there any known (command line) utility to blow up the cropped TIFFs to
full ones again?
There is a tool in libpano13 called PTuncrop, you should already have it as
part of your Hugin