Hi Eduardo,
I wish it was my work, but it is not.  The Normandy photos (the contemporary
ones) were taken by Patrick Elie.  The composite images of Leningrad were
made by Sergei Larenkov using Gimp (I don't think he used hugin).  I learned
about Larenkov's work on meetthegimp.org --
http://meetthegimp.org/leningradst-petersburg-in-composite-images/.  I
stumbled on Elie's photos.

On Fri, Sep 4, 2009 at 1:28 AM, Eduardo Perez Esteban <
[email protected]> wrote:

> A very interesting project; I had a quick look to some of your photos, and
> several of them seem quite doable, IMHO. Do not forget to show your results
> here, please.
>
>
> On Fri, Sep 4, 2009 at 5:45 AM, John Isner <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> 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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