On Nov 20, 4:13 am, Seb Perez-D wrote:
>
> > That being said, the gimp solution is not so nice for positive
> > masking. Then again, neither is the inkscape approach. In both cases,
> > we basically have to erase the desired area from all pano layers
> > except the current one. That's a lot of bor
Hey all,
I've produced the first pano I am really happy with, and I'm loving
hugin more and more everyday!
So I'd like to say a big "Thank you" to all developers for making such
a fantastic tool, and for making me have so much fun with it; you guys
rock!
Cheers!
Tim.
PS: the pano in question:
h
Hi Seb,
Thanks for your answer!
On Nov 16, 4:49 pm, Seb Perez-D wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 16, 2009 at 03:16, Timothee wrote:
> > I'm trying to do a 360 pano with my kids for xmas and they just won't
> > stay still, so I definitely will have to do some level of masking.
Hi all,
I've read the tutorial "Masking for enblend with SVG and Inkscape" at:
http://hugin.sourceforge.net/tutorials/enblend-svg/en.shtml
This is good, but it is a little old (December 07), and I was
wondering whether there is any newer technique/software to do masking?
I'm trying to do a 360 p
On Sep 29, 3:59 pm, Bruno Postle wrote:
> The workaround for your stereographic problem, and this is general
> good advice for anyone producing 'little planet' or similar views,
> is to always stitch your panorama into 'equirectangular' format
> first.
>
> You can load any equirectangular image i
Hi all,
I've just started to use Hugin and I love it. I'm hitting a problem
however when trying to publish a project to a stereographic projection
(I'm trying to build my first little planet image :) ). I'm not sure
what to do about it so I figure I'll give details of the project and
my system be