Bruno and Ryan,
Thank you for your advice.  I will definitely try all of your suggestions

On Thu, Sep 3, 2009 at 8:01 PM, Ryan Sleevi
<[email protected]<ryan%[email protected]>
> wrote:

>
> You could use Hugin to create the control points to align the images 'as
> best as possible'. Presumably, the images won't be taken with the exact
> focal length, angles, etc, so this will cause distortion between the
> images,
> but you can control the level by choosing your control points.
>
> You then use nona to remap the images, which will result in two images with
> the similar geometry, as specified by the control points.
>
> Depending on how complex your masks are, you can either use Enblend with a
> mask file, or you can load these two images into your layered image editor
> of choice and do the blending by hand.
>
> For how to use it with Enblend, see
> http://enblend.sourceforge.net/enblend.htm . If using TIFF files, Enblend
> will use the alpha channels of the images.
>
> A great tutorial on this process was written by Bruno and can be found at
> http://hugin.sourceforge.net/tutorials/enblend-svg/en.shtml
>
> In short, "Hugin" doesn't really care one way or the other. However, Nona +
> Enblend/Favorite image editor will provide you a tool chain for doing this,
> and both Nona + Enblend are available in the Hugin binary builds.
>
>
> >
>

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