Samsung silicon chip
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Samsung silicon chip
Unknown origin and usage. Lots of nice detail. Mit 10x panorama.
These annoying stitching errors is really driving me nuts, but oh well still turned out nice.
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Great colors!
Great colors. What do you use to do your stitching?
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Re: Great colors!
Adobe photoshop.Bob-O-Rama wrote:Great colors. What do you use to do your stitching?
I did add a lot of saturation and some contrast, still like the flatness.
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Re: Samsung silicon chip
Nice image!
One downside: a bit of creative misrepresentation is required to make PTGui do a flat stitch. The trick is to claim that your tiles were shot with a very long telephoto lens, so that even the whole pano covers only a tiny angle on the sphere.
--Rik
I would use PTGui for this stitching job, because it allows manual editing of the "control points" that establish correspondence between tiles. Stitching errors are usually the result of some erroneous matches, so it's a huge help to be able to identify and correct or delete those.Macro_Cosmos wrote:These annoying stitching errors is really driving me nuts
One downside: a bit of creative misrepresentation is required to make PTGui do a flat stitch. The trick is to claim that your tiles were shot with a very long telephoto lens, so that even the whole pano covers only a tiny angle on the sphere.
--Rik
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Re: Samsung silicon chip
I've tried PTGui, while I do believe it's the professional's choice for large and complex panoramas, I simply find the entire process tiresome.rjlittlefield wrote:Nice image!
I would use PTGui for this stitching job, because it allows manual editing of the "control points" that establish correspondence between tiles. Stitching errors are usually the result of some erroneous matches, so it's a huge help to be able to identify and correct or delete those.Macro_Cosmos wrote:These annoying stitching errors is really driving me nuts
One downside: a bit of creative misrepresentation is required to make PTGui do a flat stitch. The trick is to claim that your tiles were shot with a very long telephoto lens, so that even the whole pano covers only a tiny angle on the sphere.
--Rik
Thanks for the tips. I'll note them, they will become useful. Declaring the lens as a telephoto is a very smart trick!
I don't usually do panoramas due to the amount of time required. Most I can tolerate would be 16 for each stitch.