View allAll Photos Tagged Hugin
My first attempt at a panoramic photograph (one of my bedroom).
Click the 'All sizes' magnifying glass for a better view.
Comprised of 8 seperate photos, stitched together using the software Hugin for Windows.
First attempt at sterographic/little planet projection. There are some issues including one blending seam at about 9:30 and Hugin not being able to place the nadir images well enough. I'll have to try some more time consuming methods later.
I had been reading about the Hugin panorama software lately, and decided to try it out.
This pano is made up of 7 shots
Full instructions on how this was done are available here: l00pback.wordpress.com/2008/10/06/panoramas-on-linux/
HDR image, stitched from 70 sets of 3 exposure speed bracketed photos
Stitched with hugin, processed with photomatix, and then projected with hugin
Havtorn - det lille gul/røde bær på den gråbladede busk. Vokser i sandområder ved havet. Giver efter sigende en glimrende snaps. - Uploaded with a demo version of FlickrExport 2.
As I didn't have a tripod, was shivering from the cold, and refused to let this picture pass me by, I took 27 pictures for this panorama and selected the best 9. The Hugin stitch isn't perfect (I was lazy and relied on autopano-sift-c), but the scene is still lovely.
Crusty and frozen solid, I couldn't dig my skis in and get any sort of edge this time so snowplowing down there didn't seem to be a sensible option, but I came back the next day and didn't hurt myself too badly when I went down.
Located behind the Middelheim open-air museum. A great sense of peace emanates from the gardens and the architecture.
Built 1968-1970. Design: P. Félix and J. Reusens with collaboration of H. Denekens and L. Pasmans. Listed building.
Panorama of the desert from the March sport launch of the Utah Rocket Club. It was very windy and fairly cold. Most people didn't want to launch in those conditions.
This one was made from 29 images. The original image size was about 120 megapixels, and this was scaled down both to make it fit on flickr and to make fixing a few holes in the sky easier.