Hi Steve,
Steve Edmonds wrote on 15.10.16 01:53:
In this process Hugin itself will correct for perspective in your
photos, so the images will perfectly match if you have little parallax.
I have a bit of parallax (you will see this in the background) but am
not interested within this exercis
> In this process Hugin itself will correct for perspective in your
> photos, so the images will perfectly match if you have little parallax.
>
I have a bit of parallax (you will see this in the background) but am not
interested within this exercise in the background, or anything outside the
Changing the focal length of the lens does affect the straightness of the
window frames, but introduces some other problems. At setting 200mm (for
the images taken with 28mm) the frames are straight in the preview but not
aligned or perspective corrected.
So may be I am not understanding the len
Hi Steve,
Have you *optimized*, after finding the control points, for yaw, pitch,
roll, and perhaps (better after yaw, pitch, roll, in a second step) also
for positions? It is this optimization that reduces the initial errors and
thus correctly repositions each image in order to build a panora
I have just started to use Hugin.
After trying to take some pictures with effect in a forest (and failing) I
did some comparative tests between panorama and wide angle for the same
HFOV.
This has led me to delve deeper into the panorama style and the use of
Hugin. I have a pano head arriving nex