kehng
Established
Hi
Just been asked to make a panoramic stitch at work? Any ideas anyone? I use a Mac and the photos will be shot for me... What instructions should I give the photographer who is in New York?
Just been asked to make a panoramic stitch at work? Any ideas anyone? I use a Mac and the photos will be shot for me... What instructions should I give the photographer who is in New York?
rxmd
May contain traces of nut
The best free software is probably Hugin. Good program, with a lot of good tutorials.
For the photographs - manual focus, manual exposure, identical white balance. This is to make sure that images can be stitched to each other. Make sure that there is significant overlap between them. Get the photographer to use a tripod, and ideally one with a nodal point adapter (so that the camera doesn't revolve around its base, but around the nodal point of the lens). Also make sure that there aren't too many moving things in the picture between shots, otherwise they may appear multiple times.
Further instructions partly depend on the kind of panorama you want to do.
For the photographs - manual focus, manual exposure, identical white balance. This is to make sure that images can be stitched to each other. Make sure that there is significant overlap between them. Get the photographer to use a tripod, and ideally one with a nodal point adapter (so that the camera doesn't revolve around its base, but around the nodal point of the lens). Also make sure that there aren't too many moving things in the picture between shots, otherwise they may appear multiple times.
Further instructions partly depend on the kind of panorama you want to do.
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kehng
Established
thanks RXMD. checking it out now. trying PTGui now as well...
rxmd
May contain traces of nut
PTGui isn't free, it's shareware. The free trial version leaves watermarks in the final picture.
Brian Puccio
Well-known
Seconding hugin. It can get quite complex though.
kehng
Established
thanks guys. i'll get off ptgui now!
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