New problem:I have a two-photo vertical panorama of a building (with a neat bunch of sculptures at the top), and despite indicating the entire sides of the buildings in each photo of the same lines - bottom to top - the building suddenly becomes wider on each side.
I actually did bring up the Optimizer Tab as before (since it solved the last issue), but the only optimizations presented to me this time were yaw/pitch/roll.I'll try again tomorrow (?) and see where one can ADD parameters, and do the 'translation y'.I'll also look at the lens section (didn't do so before), and look to selecting the 'lens b'.
The XYZ Translation parameters are initially hidden as they are not needed for normal usage, they are made available by selecting Menu -> Interface -> Expert.
On Monday, February 21, 2022 at 5:52:13 AM UTC-5 bruno...@gmail.com wrote:The XYZ Translation parameters are initially hidden as they are not needed for normal usage, they are made available by selecting Menu -> Interface -> Expert.That is one of the reasons I think only the "Expert" interface is usable.I understand the concept that the alignment doesn't need to be great: The blending tools can cover up for poor alignment. But I've never seen that work for any of my panoramas. I have sometimes used detailed masks to cover up for poor alignment. But otherwise, poor alignment gives a terrible result.
As for the lens, I noticed the slight barrel shape of the parallel vertical lines in the original two photos of this thread. I don't know whether to consider that a lens characteristic different from the default "rectilinear": The part of such parallel lines that are perpendicular to the point of view are wider apart in viewing angle, and the viewing angle between the lines goes down with the distance from that perpendicular. But those two photos both had the camera pointing up relative to the face of the building. The perpendicular point is at the bottom of the lower picture. So the visible slight bulge in parallel vertical lines looks to me like it is closer to the vertical center of the image, which would definitely be a lens characteristic, as opposed to representing the actual point of widest viewing angle between the lines (which I don't know whether that would also be a lens characteristic different from "rectilinear").