![]() Canon have issued a fairly recent update. I does work, but is getting a little bit dated. This piece of software comes free with every Canon camera (I think). So we’ll start with the obvious – Canon Photostitch : Canon Photostitch PTGui Pro I really like too and do use often. So what’s best ? Well, best all round, for quality is Photoshop Photomerge, I haven’t been able to find better. ![]() There’s even a panorama facility built into my iPhone 4s (on which I take most of my photos). There’s also Hugin on the free end of things, which is based on the Panorama Tools free library. I also use PTGui Pro which is excellent in most circumstances and has a wide range of projections (that’s how the photos are modified to make the finished panorama). Photoshop “Photomerge” is built into all up-to-date versions of Photoshop including Photoshop Elements. Microsoft ICE (Image Composite Editor) is a good choice, because it’s free, and Microsoft do a 32 bit and 64 bit Windows version. It’s even possible to produce gigapixel images, the Microsoft ICE site talks about a gigapixel image, comprised of 800 individual photos ! My largest ever has been 35 individual photos. Without of course the expense of an expensive fisheye lens or a multi thousand dollar 75 megapixel camera. I like the power afforded to me to get wider angle shots or to be able to get a much higher megapixel result because of the multiple images being joined. I use Panorama and stitching software often for the photos I post on my blog. Each has it’s nuances, features and drawbacks. So what do I use instead ? Well it’s a tricky choice, because all panorama/stitching software isn’t created equal. Sometimes it won’t stitch together photos how I want. With a tripod then you’ll probably get an awesome merged result. List is currently the place to discuss Hugin and possibly contribute to Hugin's development.įor a list containing many of the past contributors to the Hugin project.Canon Photostitch software is good and works pretty well with good quality photos. Questions about usage and panorama stitching in general can be asked on the We are currently putting together a series of online If you want to see some example pictures created with Hugin, take a look at thousands of There are some screenshots of Hugin in action. Libpano13 is the panorama library behind HuginįreePV is an interactive viewer for QuickTimeVR and other panorama formats Panini is a panorama viewer and perspective tool The Expedia Small World campaign features 'little planet' panoramas created by Alexandre Duret-Lutzĭownloads from Sourceforge have passed the one million mark This tutorial shows how to create a 3D building survey from a single photo, Hugin and any 3D modelling softwareĪutopano-SIFT-C is an automatic control point generator See the Enblend website for details of this release. Hugin uses Enblend for seam blending and Enfuse for exposure fusion of bracketed stacks. ![]() Panotools::Script is a perl module for manipulating Hugin project files If you have been following the Hugin SVN trunk you will need to switch to the HG tip.įour students for 2010 Google Summer of Codeĭarko Makreshanski will create an Interactive Panorama Overview, Florian Achleitner will refactor Makefile generation, Antoine Deleforge will integrate libpanomatic, and Thomasz Meger will create a test suite for libpano13. Hugin previously used Subversion for source code management, we have now switched to Mercurial. ![]() This version of libpano13 is a requirement for the Hugin 2010.2.0 release.Īll four Hugin/panotools students have completed their Summer of Code projects, congratulations Darko, Florian, Antoine and Thomasz. Libpano13 is the panorama library behind Hugin. Libpano13 is the PanoTools library, this is a minor release but is required to test recent Hugin snapshots. The final deadline is 8th April, but you need to introduce yourself to us on the Hugin-PTX mailing list first. Hugin/panotools has been selected again, see for details. The Summer of Code pays students to work full-time coding for open source projects. Hugin selected for 2011 Google Summer of Code Hugin is more than just a panorama stitcher
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