View allAll Photos Tagged Hugin
View on Noordereiland from the south bank of the river Nieuwe Maas on a grand day!
I replaced this image because there were a few aligning issues that I overlooked initially. Luckily I've got several viewers with eagle eyes ;-)
15 Single exposures stichted together using PanoramaPlus X4 Hugin Panorama Photo Stitcher. It is freely available and although a bit daunting at first, it's probably the best solution out there. You can download it here: hugin.sourceforge.net
View large please (contacts only, sorry!).
The idea here is to drive the EV parameter up until all highlights become distinctly visible and none are overexposed. There is no histogram view, so I simply tweak this parameter until I am satisfied with how the picture looks. There is a "Photometric Adjustment" button in "Fast Preview Panorama", but it does something awful. I feel I am better off simply using my judgement.
I interpret Hugin's EV parameter as the maximum exposure value for the output image. It sort of makes sense: the camera encodes 12 bits; it is easy to observe a 1 or 2-stop difference looking East or West in the evening, so all individual exposures anchored at the edges could ramp up to 13 stops. (Just a WAG)
At any rate, we're almost done with Hugin. There is just one more thing to check out, and it is fun, too.
i recently wrote a Gimp script for converting panoramic images into semicircles in such as way that the distortion is minimized (compared for instance to the distortion seen in two roads in a wood diverged). the idea is to fit the image into a more compact space.
This is a rework of a pano I shot last year. The original was done before enfuse existed. This iteration was completed by pushing the original raw files over and under exposed (-3 -2 , -1 , 0 , +1, +2, & +3) I then fed them all into enfuse and reprocessed the pano with hugin and enblend. Pushing the raw files did add a little noise, which I removed with GreyCRestore plugin in the Gimp. After that, I cloned out some gum spots on the floor using the mathmap script from Sebestian Duarte. And:
Viola!!
Take a look at this pano closely in full size, there is a little bit of everything Naples. Tourists, the couple in love, the nativity seen pieces, the African street vendor, and the markets. It also looks stunning printed at 100cm wide. I sold 4 of these at the Bazaar.
View this panorama in the interactive viewer.
(This will open a new window to SPi-V, an interactive panorama viewer created by Aldo and hosted at fieldofview.com. Requires Adobe Shockwave.)
Little planet view of a handheld Panorama of the Railway Viaduct in Gümmenen, Switzerland.
Shot with a Sigma 8mm Fisheye lens on a Nikon D80 and stitched and remapped in hugin.sourceforge.net/
Immersive View: www.360cities.net/image/guemmenen-viadukt-faraway
the swiss parliament building, during the museumsnacht.
equirectangular projection. hdr, tonemapped with manituk-algorithm, local contrast
stitched with hugin from 3*4 images (4 for each exposure of -2, 0 and +2 EV)
The construction company that built this place never has cleaned up their mess, so the view out of my window is pretty wretched. When spring comes, we're going to buy a bunch of sunflower seeds and seed that whole area. Sort of a guerrilla beautification project.
2.5d blender parallax animation
hugin stitch
lens : jupiter-12, 35mm, f2.8
camera : Fuji X-a1
music : "for Elisa" hand crank music box
A stereographic projection of a spherical panorama. Taken at Vista Alegre, one of Ica's more famous vineyards. Assembled from 78 images using hugin. I cheated a bit since hugin wasn't "getting" the fact that the take was a full 180 vfov, you can see the pinch around the tripod where I stretched the panorama a bit to cover the middle.
Una proyeccion stereographica de un panorama esferico. Tomado en Vista Alegre, un de los vinicutores mas famosos de Ica. Armado de 78 imagenes usando hugin. Hice trampa porque hugin no reconocia que la toma eran 180 grados verticales, se puede ver la distorcion alrededor del tripode donde estire el panorama un poco
Looking out into Marblehead Harbour from Crocker park. There was a sailing race going on, with pairs of sailboats weaving in and out of the anchored yachts.
Thanks to BY pengok for allowing us (IRPS) visit the workshop and give permission to publish the photos. This photos actually consist of 4 photos then I use hugin to make it panorama :)
This is panoramic photo of tandil city in Buenos Aires province in Argentina. The photo was created using: hugin
hugin.sourceforge.net/
These two frames were shot wit the same lens, but apparently also with a wide parallax, especially in the vertical dimension. Hugin found many good control points, but it clustered them in a relatively small area, leaving the peripheral areas of each frame unconstlrained.
I have no use for such a points: the effect of adding new points closer to the edges will be small. I am not familiar with the remapping (warping) algorithm, but I suspect based on how it works that clustering too many control points together gives them an extra weight. In addition, the more similar points have precedence over the less similar points. Because I know that Hugin has already exhausted the pool of well-matching points during automatic point generation, any points I add now will inevitably be of worse qualitiy (the quality of match is measured by the distance in the similarity space — note the Distance value in the control points table).
So my strategy for stitching the poorly matching frames is to get rid of the automatically assigned points and place my own, aiming for wider coverage, rather than quality of match at any given point.
Or, to me as a child, the "Doggy Boat".
Hugin, a replica Viking ship sailed and rowed from Esbjerg in Denmark to Broadstairs in Kent, England, to mark the 1,500th anniversary of the arrival of the Vikings at Ebbsfleet in 449. The Vikings are said to have included Hengest (or Hengist) and Horsa.
The ship made good speed crossing the North Sea and arrived two days early. The crew of fifty - only one, the navigator, a professional seaman - celebrated by swimming in the sea.
The ship was beached at Broadstairs and was then sailed up the Thames to Greenwich for a reception. A further trip up the Thames took them to more celebrations in Richmond-upon-Thames.
The events of that summer brought some brightness back into post-war Britain and were a hint of things to come in the Festival of Britain in 1951.
When it came to the ultimate fate of Hugin, things became a little complicated. The ship was owned by the Danish Travel Association which put it up for sale. The local authorities in both Broadstairs and Ramsgate put in offers and asked specifically that it should not be sold to the other town. In the event, the Association entered into negotiations with the "Daily Mail" newspaper because, as they said, "we did not want to let either town down."
After over fifty years exposure to wind and weather on the cliff top at Cliffsend, Hugin was not looking well. The sail and mast were no longer visible, the paint on the shields was fading and the hull itself showing signs of age. Hugin was taken to Gloucester for a complete overhaul and returned to Cliffsend in 2005. My only quibble with the restoration is that the shields along the sides are now all the same colour.
pepsi team is on right, chinese heroes are on left. good contrast.
hugin panorama group (china) at:
www.flickr.com/groups/love_hugin
Let's join us!