View allAll Photos Tagged Hugin
The Hugin is a reconstructed Norsemen longship that is located at Pegwell Bay in Ramsgate, Kent, England. It was a gift from the Danish government in commemoration of the 1500th anniversary of the A.D. 449 migration from Jutland (modern Denmark) to Kent of Hengist and Horsa, Jutes who became leaders of the Anglo-Saxon invasion. The ship is a replica of the much later ca. 890 Gokstad ship. The boat was built in Denmark from where it was sailed by 53 Danes to England in 1949. The ship landed at Viking Bay in Kent, before being moved to its current site. In 2005 the ship underwent repairs.
This is an equirectangular panorama, stitched from 7 shots.
Quick Time Virtual panorama
There is a planning application to demolish the three independent shops on the left. The new Sheffield policy is that these applications are no longer advertised with signs on the street - You have to watch the Sheffield City Council web-site to find out about them.
Final date for writing objections is 30th October 2014, do it here: publicaccess.sheffield.gov.uk/online-applications/applica...
Dal Campanile di Giotto a Santa Maria del Fiore, la cattedrale di firenze. Unito con hugin
Shot from the Campanile di Giotto at the Cathedral of Florence, Santa Maria del Fiore. Shots merged with hugin
Long Exposure Panorama --
Footage: 9 Photos (Portrait), stiched with Hugin
Projection: Panini (12)
FOV: 196 x 72 °
Ev: -1.11
Size: 16719x5090 px
Not happy with this boy's face up, but I'm definitely improving. I was able to cover most of the damage, at least until I can save up to send him to be repaired by a pro. I fixed his teeth (one fang was damaged) and worked on his eyes a bit more. The light is totally shitty making the face up look even worse XD Ah well. He'll do for now until I have the energy to try again. At least he looks nice for the new lady in the house....
stitched from images of this movie: www.flickr.com/photos/habi/3782593740/
see it in full glory here: habi.gna.ch/panoramas/feenjoch.html
I did a terrible job taking these pictures. I only got 39 (no idea why!). Usually I use ~60 pictures, and takes 70-80.
But I think this was so funny so I tried to patch it together anyhow,
My first experiment with focus stacking using Enfuse, shots were aligned using Hugin
Enfuse Command Line:
--HardMask --wContrast=1 --wExposure=0.001 --wSaturation=0.001
One last (double) projection before the holidays- I thought this arrangement would be appropriate since the subject matter is a greenhouse.
part of my Globemaker set.
Panorámica con Hugin del Paso de la Procesión por la Esquina de las Obras Sociales del Santo Hermano Pedro.
Panorama of the main room inside the Milwaukee Makerspace.
I shot this with my home-built panorama head.
Here's the same space from a different angle.
I finally got the HDR panorama to work... not worth the effort! LOL... I don't like HDR most of the time and definitely not in this case. :) I had trouble because I accidentally left the VC on my lens, so the images were misaligned. I tried and tried and tried to get Hugin to do the HDR merging, but it just couldn't align them. Corel Paintshop couldn't get that job done either. In the end, only Picturenaut would align them. I was surprised because it usually doesn't align images very well.
Little boxes on the hillside
Little boxes made of ticky tacky
Little boxes, little boxes
Little boxes all the same
There's a green one and a pink one
And a blue one and a yellow one
And they're all made out of ticky tacky
And they all look just the same
And the people in the houses all went to the university
Where they all were put in boxes, little boxes all the same
And there's doctors and there's lawyers and business executives
And they're all made out of ticky tacky and they all look just the same
And they all play on the golf course and drink their martini dry
And they all have pretty children and the children go to school
And the children go to summer camp and then to the university
Where they all got put in boxes, and they all came out the same
And the boys go into business and marry and raise a family
In boxes, little boxes, little boxes all the same
There's a green one, and a pink one
And a blue one and a yellow one
And they're all made out of ticky tacky
And they all look just the same
Malvina Reynolds - Little Boxes
Best viewed large... farm4.static.flickr.com/3234/2973117073_dbe5438126_o.jpg
I'm trying to photographically capture the experience of driving down the road in Afghanistan. This was taken from a snippet of a movie, dumped to jpgs, and stitched together. I'm still learning how to use this method effectively, and I think if I can get it down it will be a powerful photography method.
Technical details...
I took a movie recording on my camera, output the MOV to an image stack using ImageJ with a Quicktime plugin ( rsbweb.nih.gov/ij/ ) and then stitched it together using Hugin and Nona ( hugin.sourceforge.net/ ).
I'm having a hard time getting more than 150 images to blend well. Two problems, computational time and parallax ( en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parallax ).
The parallax I'm learning how to minimize while recording the data. Main thing is to not try to record things in very different focal planes. Street fronts are working out well if I can have a lane between myself and the curb, and minimal traffic so cars don't cut into my field of view.
Problems I need help solving:
1 - Turning MOV's and AVI's into image stacks... I'm using ImageJ with a Quicktime plugin to import the movie into ImageJ and then saving as an image stack. A 9 meg movie takes 1.5 gigs of ram to do this way -- there has to be a more efficient way to. However, I can't find an easy script, and don't have long periods of internet connectivity to go wandering around the internet looking for one.
2 - Scripting control of Hugin... There doesn't appear to be a guide for scripting control of Hugin, which would be super useful. I've got two laptops here so I can put one as a brute force machine. I'd love to drop a series of MOVs into a folder and then fire up a script which starts at one and end goes to the other. Right now it takes a lot of babysitting (click here, click there), and I want to be able to walk away. I know what parameters and settings I want, but alas no easy scripting.
3 - Other ways to create panoramas automatically. Ideally open source stuff so I can install it on multiple machines without dicking with licenses.
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.
Au loin :
à gauche, les carrières de talc de Luzenac
1er plan :; pic de l'étang Rébenty
A sa droite, au fond, le Tarbesou, la dent d'Orlu encadrée par la Camisette à sa gauche et le Roc Blanc à sa droite
Au fond à droite, le Carli, précédé du Puig Pedros et du pic d'Auriol.
A droite, 1er plan : Tose de Pédourrés.