Hi,

the usual workflow is to always stitch and output to one equirectangular
file in a first step. You can use all kinds of photos (usually from a
normal wide angle lens or a fisheye) as input images and you can even
mix them.

All following retouching steps (minor mistakes that could not be
corrected by masking of the input images) can be done in this file.
Often enough it is better to temporarily extract cube faces, they use
rectilinear projection which makes retouching a lot easier.
see <http://wiki.panotools.org/Tutorials> for further tips&tricks...

A nice tutorial about "little planets" is here:
<http://ultrawide.wordpress.com/2008/11/20/how-to-create-a-little-planet-using-hugin/>
Note that this is even done without the equirectangular file as an
intermediate step.

Happy stitching (and planet building!)

Carl


On Wed, Dec 2, 2009 at 10:18, Heliooos wrote:
> 
> I found some tutorials how to create 360 degrees panoramas in
> stereographic  projection which look like a planet. They use o
> equirectangular panoramas made with fisheye lens.
> 
> Is it possible to create (static objects) something similar with
> normal lens? Maybe shooting more photos to cover the needed area and
> then stitch it together?

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