Hi Yo'av,

I do not consider myself an expert, but as I see no further hints, I'll give it 
a try.

Try ticking one of the 'exposure corrected' or 'exposure fused' boxes under 
'Panorama outputs' in the Stitcher tab. You'll get transformed and scaled .tiff 
files of the original scans.

Import them in Photoshop/Gimp, increase the canvas of both images, align them 
manually (shouldnt be too hard as the distortions are identical now) and do 
your operations.  Perhaps in the log files you can find the exact shifts needed 
for perfect alignment.

I am sure there is also a trick to obtain a two-layered TIFF file with both 
images already aligned but I don't know how to do that.


Good luck,

boomslang


--------------------------------------------
On Wed, 1/4/15, Yo'av Moshe <[email protected]> wrote:

 Subject: Re: [hugin-ptx] Aligning two images one on top of another
 To: [email protected]
 Cc: [email protected]
 Date: Wednesday, 1 April, 2015, 9:39
 
 Thanks Alex!
 While I managed to load the images and
 get 24 control points, I still can't find a way to
 export image B according to the corresponding points on
 image A.
 Any ideas for how
 to do it?
 Thanks!
 Yo'av
 
 On Tuesday, 31 March 2015 20:03:18 UTC+3, Alex 
 wrote:On 03/31/2015 07:47 AM, Yo'av
 Moshe wrote:
 
 > Hi,
 
 > Knowing that Hugin is made
 specifically for creating panorama images, I was 
 
 > wondering if I can use it for the
 following task:
 
 > 
 
 > I have two scanned images (scanned
 from a roll film). Image A is larger 
 
 > than image B, but image B has better
 colours and saturation. What I was 
 
 > thinking to do is to put image B on
 top of image A, and then to apply only 
 
 > the hue and saturation properties of
 it onto image A.
 
 > To do this, I need to have both images
 aligned perfectly on top of another. 
 
 > Problem is that as as expected with
 any scanned image, the cropping is 
 
 > slightly different, there are minor
 distortions etc'.
 
 > 
 
 > I wanted to use Hugin to create a file
 based on image B, that is aligned 
 
 > according to image A (meaning:
 it's the same size as image A and all 
 
 > elements in it are aligned correctly).
 
 > 
 
 > Can Hugin, or any of the tools that
 come with it, be used to do that? 
 
 > 
 
 > Thank you so very much!
 
 > 
 
 > Yo'av
 
 > 
 
 
 
 I think you can do this, it's part of
 the HDR component of the
 
 stitching/blending step at the end. Really
 what you are doing is some
 
 form of HDR/exposure blending.
 
 
 
 Thanks,
 
 Alex
 
 
 
 
 
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