View allAll Photos Tagged Hugin
Uncorrected 20mm perspective on a Manhattan street. See the next photo for a hugin corrected version.
View this one EXTRA LARGE
Trying out the Hugin app. Seems really neat. This is a composite of 28 frames.
I'm impressed, this was a brutal test. I took the photos from vantage point of a pole, that pole is not in the photo so I moved around the pole, changing the perspective a little. I was shooting handheld and the frames were up and down and not level
You can see a few mistakes, some of the power lines, the little red circle above the rail switch, and the biggest one is the area about the centennial sign which was my fault really...I made one fix in that area but because of the file size and the time it took to render this it was quicker for me to fix it in the gimp.
The program also will do some HDR work, and did I mention it was a free download?
Shot manual F6.3 1/200th ISO 400 cloudy whitebalance for all 28 frames.
Next time I will use a tripod and use manual focus as well so that the focal plan stays the same around the picture, oh and I'd actually finish the 360 degrees.
I will try and post another test I did with the program that was a little tough too.
A picture to show how all the different photos end up in this panorama. View original size, otherwise it's not very useful.
The view from K's grandparents' house on Big Pine Key. The last pictures I'll take there, as the house is now sold. Amazing place.
Picture is worth viewing at its original, somewhat vast, size.
The Luxor Pyramid. Stitched from 18 iPhone photos taken at the Mandalay Bay tram station. Check it out at the full resolution - its kinda freaky how well the composite comes together. hugin.sourceforge.net/
This is one of my first attempts at combining most of a hemisphere. It'd look better with a bluer sky, fewer trees, and lots of little fair weather cumuli or criss-crossing contrails.
Un total de 31 imágenes fueron usadas. Hugin dió como resultado una imagen de 258 MB "en bruto", sin comprimir. Despues de procesar y limpiar, quedó una imagen de 155 MB sin comprimir. Es quizás la panorámica más grande que he hecho :-)
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A grand total of 31 images were used. Hugin gave as a result an uncompressed 258 MB "raw" image. After post-procesing and cleaning, the result was an uncompressed 155 MB image. It may well be the largest panorama I've created :-)
The sun had only a narrow break in a bank of clouds to the west through which to light this huge storm. It was starting to darken from the bottom when I made this shot. This thing rolled to the north and hammered Phoenix after dark.
A 17 shot, 360 degree pano taken from the lower waterside deck as Asbury Camp and Retreat Center on Silver Lake, NY, USA.
The David Hume Tower and South Edinburgh, as seen from a very dirty window in Appleton Tower. (Yet another composite photo stitched together with Hugin.)
My parents set up a treasure hunt in the hills for my son's birthday. It was loads of fun, but extremely windy. Up at the top I had to seriously brace myself because it could have easily knocked me down.
The pano was hand held, and I accidentally left it on auto white balance. Hugin did a pretty good job with a little help from me.
I haven't finished this yet, but I figured I'd put it up here anyway. (Still need to clean up the panorama stitching slightly, crop, and tweak in Photoshop or Gimp)
The original is 30,000 pixels wide (!!!), and as such was too large to upload to Flickr.
The version I uploaded is 10k pixels wide. (You can see the full size on Flickr- open the "Actions" menu above the photo, click "View all Sizes", then click "Original". But be careful- I froze my web browser doing that!)
This is constructed from 22 individual shots on a Nikon D300 using an 85mm prime lens.
Those shots were stitched together using the amazing, open-source Hugin Panorama Creator.
I love this city, and I love Open Source.