Hello Forex,
On Tue, 09 Jun 2015 00:43:37 +1000, Forex Valdes <
cvald...@gmail.com>
wrote:
> Thanks Terry
> Let me see if I got it right. I am using equirectangular.
> I was thinking that you need to remove distorsion before you project to
> equirectangular so the images to be projected have straight lines and not
> curved, and no fish eye effect. But you say you project to
> equirectangular and the projection will help to remove the fisheye
> effect? or you do two
> steps in one projecting and removing distorsion?
Yes, changing the projection can remove fisheye distortion, but are you
referring to lens distortion as well? If yes, then you need to have
calibration data for your lens, or stitch overlapping images from the lens
so that hugin can derive the lens parameters and make the correction.
> If I see my original pictures they show distorsion - straight lines are
> curved. My end goal is to have a nice equirectangular panorama with
> straight lines. Thanks again
If you want straight lines to be straight, then rectilinear projection is
required for that, but it is really only usable for angles of view less
than about 120 degrees. Greater than that and the image becomes distorted.
Load your image into hugin, ensuring you define the correct projection
type and FOV if hugin asks for that, and then view the image in the Fast
Panorama preview window. You can alter the projection in the projection
tab.
have a look here
<
http://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutorials/image-projections.htm> for
info on projections, and there are probably many other sites as well.
Have you looked at the hugin tutorials at
<
http://hugin.sourceforge.net/tutorials/index.shtml> ?
They may help your understanding of how to use hugin.