I have also the feeling that very intricate masks, e. g. to remove
tripod shadows with exclude masks, used to allow small patches of a "no
shadow photo" (in some cases more than one photo), can lead to an invalid
auto-destroyed result.
In that cases only redoing the masks and retrying some
On Wednesday, March 9, 2022 at 7:02:07 AM UTC-5 gunter.ko...@gmail.com
wrote:
> You can remove exzessive overlap by adding a mask that removes part of an
> image.
> But I wonder if too much overlap should be a warning, not a "error out and
> delete all the evidence" case...
>
I'm pretty
You can remove exzessive overlap by adding a mask that removes part of an image.
But I wonder if too much overlap should be a warning, not a "error out and
delete all the evidence" case...
--
A list of frequently asked questions is available at:
http://wiki.panotools.org/Hugin_FAQ
---
You
I cannot answer your main question, but if you want to know the command
line options hugin passes to enblend, you can:
1. start hugin and make all the settings you want, especially those in the
"stitch" tab, but instead of pressing the "stitch" button, save the project
file (assume the
Enblend's blending is dependent on the order that images are specified on
the command line. By specifying the images in a different order (maybe in
reverse, or maybe with the "redundant" image and its neighbour that you
want it to blend with first) you may get something closer to the result
That would be very useful: not automatically deleting the defective (?)
blended result!
Em sex., 25 de fev. de 2022 às 12:27, johnfi...@gmail.com <
johnfine2...@gmail.com> escreveu:
> How do I stop enblend from removing the result?
>
> The message in the log is:
>
> enblend: warning: some
How do I stop enblend from removing the result?
The message in the log is:
enblend: warning: some images are redundant and will not be blended
enblend: note: usually this means that at least one of the images
enblend: note: does not belong to the set
enblend: encountered degenerate image/mask