With regard to the panorama image stitching. Do I really need a complete pto or ini? If I need to do all the steps in hugin or via the command line tools, and then open that in lux and stitch from lux, I currently do not see the benefit of lux for panorama stitching. Only as exercise how good lux can do that.
Harry Op zo 21 mrt. 2021 om 12:22 schreef Harry van der Wolf <[email protected]>: > > > Op zo 21 mrt. 2021 om 10:26 schreef 'Kay F. Jahnke' via hugin and other > free panoramic software <[email protected]>: > >> >> This thread announces two new features in lux, namely stitching images >> and doing exposure fusion with the Burt and Adelson image splining >> algorithm. Harry has used lux' exposure fusion capabilities, but so far >> - and quite suprisingly - there are no reports of image stitching, even >> though all it takes is to press a single key on the keyboard. I had >> hoped for some sort of 'peer review' of my modified implementation of >> the B&A algorithm, and I posted early to give interested people the >> opportunity to take an interest in ongoing development. >> > > > I did have a look at stitching some time ago and this morning again, but > it is not clear to me. > This morning using the latest lux on my linux box. > > - I tried a simple, fully optimised and aligned 2 image pto: I could not > make that work (while Hugin created a nice pano), and it does not show it > as a pano, but as 2 badly completely overlying images. > I then converted that pto into an ini using your pto2pv.py and loaded > that one. I had to rotate that one as PV does not recognise the portrait > like images. It simply shows a very high and small image > (Shift-hold-left-click-drag to rotate them 90 degrees counter-clockwise), > and then pressed "p" to stich it. That gave me a black image the size of > one image. > - Then I took a 4 image wide landscape based panorama from one of the > multiblend test sets (for which I created the mac binary). The pto loads OK > and shows OK. It does a nice live stitch indeed, although it doesn't blend > well on the overlap, but you get a nice impression. when pressing "p" it > again creates a black image the size of one image. > - Using the snapshot "button" in the viewer or Shift-snapshot button > didn't help either. > > I also tried by simply loading a panorama images and "monkey like" press > keys and screen buttons, but that doesn't make it work either. Then it only > acts as an image viewer. > > I re-read your readme a couple of times, but didn't find the right clue on > how to do it. > Being busy on a lot of other things as well (with hugin doing a great > job), I waited for others to report and learn from their experiences. > But indeed: nobody did. So that was "some time ago". > This morning I tried again, using the latest lux, but couldn't make it > work either (via above steps). Maybe it is my ignorance, but the process is > not clear. > > So that is my report ;) > > Harry > -- A list of frequently asked questions is available at: http://wiki.panotools.org/Hugin_FAQ --- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "hugin and other free panoramic software" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/hugin-ptx/CAGARPpvc45gL2GDj8h_OvJxKCTivhufJyXqT%3DLfQG2g5JjQBWA%40mail.gmail.com.
