Hello Kay,
On Tue, 04 Mar 2014 21:19:46 +1100, kfj <[email protected]> wrote:
If you can live without the curve of the wall, I would do this:
- In a drawing program like gimp, create a line drawing of a stripe with
sections having the same aspect ratio as the individual images on the
wall - imagine a ladder put down horizontal with rungs upright
- Mask the individual normal shots so that there is some of the left and
right neighbouring image visible; enough to let the blending software
create an invisible blend.
- 'pin' the four corners of each image to the corresponding points on
your skeleton drawing (the ladder)
- use the ladder drawing as reference and optimize the other images for
r, p, y, x, y and z. If the otimization fails, you could try adding line
control points along the ladder's lines; in my experience with stitching
mosaics from handheld shots this has always helped getting the
optimization to work and achieving a good result.
- leave the placement of the seams to enblend; the curvature might be
slight enough not to create too much parallactic error
This process might be less work than processing each individual image to
be perfectly normal and of the right size and then mosaicing them
together.
And making a trial with just a few images won't cost you too much time.
Thanks for that. I'll have a try and see how it goes.
Cheers,
--
Regards,
Terry Duell
--
A list of frequently asked questions is available at:
http://wiki.panotools.org/Hugin_FAQ
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