On Sun, 2010-06-27 at 19:04 +0200, Jan Martin wrote:

>         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? 

I've uploaded it to the google groups page:
https://groups.google.com/group/hugin-ptx/web/00000001.png
>         
>              * 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?

That could work. You can load the same image file twice in Hugin.

You will also have to make a separate lens for each image on the camera
and lens tab, and set the horizontal shift in pixels. Otherwise, Hugin
would expect the centre of the image to be the centre of projection,
which isn't the case.
>         
>              * 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?

Not really. The optimiser will normally figure out better angles itself
with good control points. If it doesn't, setting almost correct angles
before optimising helps.

It wasn't exactly 180 degrees yaw between the images when I tried it.

-James


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