James,

thank you very much.

Jan

Continuation:
On Sun, Jun 27, 2010 at 6:31 PM, James Legg <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Sun, 2010-06-27 at 16:59 +0200, Jan Martin wrote:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I need your help with stitching these frames extracted from a YouTube
> > video.
> > There is nearly no overlapping.
> >
> > http://bit.ly/aEYOZD
> >
> > Can this be done at all?
>
> It can be done (with some difficulty). There is a small gap in the image
> I produced though, since neither image covers that area.
>

Care to post the resulting image?

>
> > If so how? (I am a beginner)
>
>       * Split the input images in two. Save each half as a separate
>        image.
>

I wonder if I can use the images as is?
Save the same image to a "left" and "right" folder. Then place the crop
circle once on the left and once on the right side?


>      * Load the the two images in Hugin.
>      * Set their projection to circular fisheye. Use an initial field
>        of view of about 185 degrees.
>

Do I need to set the yaw to 180 for one image?


>      * On the control points tab, place a few control points linking
>        matching features on both sides of the images. Pick features in
>        the distance as there is some paralax error (when you have
>        choice at all, since the overlap is so narrow). Hugin might try
>        to guess more accurate positions but I found it just made them
>        worse in this case, so I turned of auto fine-tune from the
>        bottom right of the tab. The more control points the better, but
>        they must all be positioned accurately.
>      * On the optimiser tab, optimise positions & view. Hugin then
>        finds a reasonable angle for the second image in relation to the
>        first, and a more likely field of view for the camera.
>      * On the crop tab, shrink the circle slightly for each image to
>        crop out the black outline of the image. Ignore the bit cut off
>        the side for now.
>      * On the Mask tab, remove the black bit cropped out from the sides
>        of the circle. Select an image, press add new mask, then click
>        to place the corners of a polygon that covers the black bits
>        that should be in the circle. Repeat for the other image.
>      * Use a preview window to check it looks OK. There will be some
>        error on the bits closest to the camera, and a hole on one side,
>        but the bits in the distance should line up.
>      * On the Stitcher tab, press calculate optimal size.
>      * Stitch or send to batch.
> >
> > Please post the .pto and pto.mk files.
>
> Attached. I named the images 00000001l.png for the left of 00000001.jpg
> and 00000001r.png for the right.
>
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