I'm curious to see that I can do with it, but we're missing the link to
the Google Drive folder...
On 4/9/25 14:13, Matt Rosing wrote:
I tried. The results are not impressive. Here's the link to a google
drive folder with the input and a few outputs.
close.tif and .jpg is the up close image. far.tif and .jpg is the
far image. I used the tif files.
simple.tif is the result of just doing the simple interface. Given
that the camera was on a tripod it sure seemed to have cut out a lot.
advanced.tif is the result of doing the advanced interface. I have no
idea why it twisted the images, didn't leave me with a square image
and still cut out a lot.
try-lens.tif is the result of using the advanced interface to load the
files and decrease the fov for the near image. I just guessed. I then
used the simple interface to align and stitch the images together with
the focus stacking. I did use the panorama editor or whatever it's
called to get the image square. While this is the best version, there
are still a lot of shadows around the trees from what I assume is the
blurry part of the trees from the near image getting pulled into the
far image. Is there an obvious fix for this?
Clearly, I have no idea how to use the advanced interface but the
simple one just doesn't work for these photos. Is there something that
describes what the simple interface does at the advanced level, as a
way to learn this interface? So maybe I could start there and then be
able to ask some slightly more intelligent questions.
Thanks
On Tuesday, April 8, 2025 at 3:10:04 AM UTC-6 bruno...@gmail.com wrote:
Hi Matt, yes Hugin will let you use a different angle of view for
each shot. Then when it aligns the images it will calculate this
angle of view for you.
So in the Photos tab, right-click on either of the photos and
create a 'new lens' (this tells Hugin not to link lens settings).
Then, also in the Photos tab, Optimise > Positions and View, and
re-optimise the alignment.
Fell free to share your photos or results.
--
Bruno
On Tue, 8 Apr 2025, 07:46 Matt Rosing wrote:
I'm new with using hugin. I'm using 2024.0.1 with the simple
interface. I have two photos taken with a 85mm prime lens.
Both photos were of mostly the same thing. In the foreground
is a bunch of icicles hanging off a roof and in the rear a
hundred yards away is a grove of aspen trees with no leaves.
This seems like a really hard problem because there's nothing
in focus in both images.
Using the simple interface I loaded the two photos, aligned
them using the default and created the panorama with the focus
stacked option. The alignment is partly correct in that it
figured out that the two images are slightly rotated and
shifted with respect to each other but what it didn't figure
out is that this lens creates a bit of focus breathing, or the
focal length of the lens changes a bit based on focal
distance. So, the image focused on the foreground has a
slightly higher focal length. The result is that the
background is in focus and some of the icicles in the center
are okay but the ones far from the center are pulled from the
far image and just blurry. I changed the interface to advanced
and, the best I can tell is that there are no control points.
I don't know. I tried the advanced option from the start and
got control points but the result was no better. I read the
tutorial referenced in the help section under focus stacking
by Pat David and the result of the alignment was "After
control points pruning reference images has no control points"
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David W. Jones
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wandering the landscape of god
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