To me the first set of images looks like just not being indefinitely sharp 
- which is typical for real-live images: The optics in front of the camera 
sensor isn't perfect, even if you pay thousands of Dollars/Euros for it. 
The autofocus of your camera is optimized on something between speed and 
accuracy. And even if it happens to tell the optics to keep exactly this 
point in focus . the rest of the scene, being 3D, won''t be. Then the image 
is compressed so many of them fill on real-live disks - and only every 
roughly every fourth pixel gives you a measurement for the "red" value, 
every fourth pixel one for the blue one and every fourth for the green one 
- even without the pixels on the sensor being so small that it is virtually 
impossible for a photon to make sure to in the end always hitting the 
correct one That phenomenon is then counter-acted by the software that 
interprets data from the sensor.

The result is: You get pictures that are sharp enough for most real-world 
applications. But if you zoom in and look at the details you see that no 
mechanism human beings create is perfect.

The last image you sent looks like you moved the camera while it was shot. 
The darker it is (and thus: the longer the camera has to collect light in 
order to get enough photons per camera pixel that it can offer a good 
signal-to-noise ratio) and the more your optical zoom zooms enlarges the 
picture (and this reduces the area to collect light from whilst enlarging 
any effect from moving the camera) the harder it is to get a steady image.
[email protected] schrieb am Donnerstag, 18. Mai 2023 um 
04:27:03 UTC+2:

> Can anyone please help?
>
> On Wednesday, March 1, 2023 at 3:45:23 PM UTC-5 Sussy OS wrote:
>
>> Here is another example on a bigger scale: 
>> https://drive.google.com/file/d/1_ADF6kgp1aP_2Yn0tOSTGaFkCjeVr9kL/view?usp=sharing
>>
>> On Wednesday, March 1, 2023 at 3:23:04 PM UTC-5 Sussy OS wrote:
>>
>>> Hello, I just downloaded Hugin recently, and it worked fine for 
>>> stitching two images side by side, but if I try to do images where I zoom 
>>> into the details (see examples below) it tuns out all blurry. Can anybody 
>>> help me to use Hugin correctly? I'm using the Sony Cyber-shot DSC-W220 
>>> Optical SteadyShot 12.1 MP camera for my images. EXAMPLE: 
>>> https://imgur.com/a/kh6duzM
>>
>>

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