View allAll Photos Tagged Hugin

OKF 2017 - Tropical Butantã, SP

Here' s an experiment with the photostitch software (Hugin) that I knew would be difficult. Not only am I very close to the fence, and not only does the fence-to-background relationship change from shot to shot, but there is this problem that all of the chain links all look alike.

I expected that third problem to be the killer, but I was surprised by how many control points the software got right. And after I fixed what I believe were all of them (this was a very tedious task!), the other two problems still prevented a good merging.

 

The fourth problem is that even if the merging were perfect, it'd still be a boring picture.

8 photos of the same guy in time trials, merged together using Hugin.

Set of pictures stitched with Hugin

«Junto a la factoría de garo se conserva una importante instalación vinícola datada entre el siglo III y el IV d.C. En sus dolia se habrían llegado a almacenar unos 10.000 litros de vino. Los rastros de frutos carnosos, levaduras, miel o canela encontrados han permitido reconstruir la fabricación del vino en aquella época.»

 

Museo de Historia de Barcelona.

Slighly wider crop of the original blend. original is 5563x1852, 10.3Mp

an "simple" panorama from 11 images, made with hugin. architectural projection.

i now start to work on the HDR/enfused-version...

 

probably best viewed big: www.flickr.com/photos/habi/3297706932/sizes/l/

This image is made up of 12 individual shots and stitched together using some free software called Hugin

collings foundation b24j "witchcraft" at concord, ca, 13 June 2010. stitched with hugin and touchup in photoshop CS

Football training ground near Rheinhafen power plant, Karlsruhe, 2-piece pano. There are actually a few folks running around if you look closely...

Panorama of the Castillo de San Marcos fort in St. Augustine, Florida, USA.

Same rock as in www.flickr.com/photos/spacelama/4162234211/ - A 44 degree wide Warrumbungles panarama composed of some rather telephoto images. (warning: fullsize image is ~10000x5000 pixels in size)

Panorámica de la Avenida de la Constitución. A la derecha, el Edificio La Adriática.

Entrance to the station alongside the office blocks by Richard Seifert & Partners. Late 1970's

Stitched using hugin

The full "bow" caught here with a panorama. -2,0,+2 stop exposures HDR/panorama-merged with Hugin.

Vista de la sala XVII del Museo Arqueológico de Sevilla, con la Venus de Itálica en el centro y un opus sectile en el suelo.

360°-Panorama-Test to show Mark how it's done. Not like this, since obviously there are some problems with the railing of the Untertorbrücke.

 

Step into the panorama here: habi.gna.ch/panoramas/untertorbruecke.html

The frontage of the Hilton Hotel in Brighton, a panorama stitched and perspective corrected using Hugin.

click here for bigger version (recommended)

 

4 shots blended and fused with Hugin.

First attempt with 3 layers and linear gradient for lights control.

today saw this - wvs.topleftpixel.com/07/06/20/ and had to try it out - immediately! The nearest open space was this bridge.

 

The cultural learnings of glorious planet-panoramas:

- it helps if you have a real wideangle lens. With my 18mm I took 65 images and it took ages for autopano and hugin to stitch them together. With wider lens you can take less pictures

- for the center of image choose simple background like grass or asphalt. Avoid straight lines. With straigt lines, like, say, railings, It's like with white pants, every little defect becomes really noticeable. I had so much fun making up the middle blind spot! I think it came out artsy :)

- choose a static, still place. A busy bridge in rush hour wasn't ideal. Yes, I could edit out the car fragments, but was too lazy.

Panorama of the Kwade Hoek, near Goedereede, NL.

 

12 portrait-oriented photos stitched together in Hugin.

Crow (Raven?) at stonehenge

on a sunny sunday afternoon

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