On 12 Jan., 18:48, Tom Sharpless <
tksharpl...@gmail.com> wrote:
> I've been happily making high resolution mosaics of wall paintings
> with Hugin.
>
> It's a bit chancy getting the very wide ones to align right, but with
> plenty of straight line CPs and care to avoid CPs not on the plane of
> the mural, I've had good results. In some cases I've had to add one
> image at a time to the optimized pool, presetting y,p,r,x,y,z to
> reasonably close values.
I've done a fair amount of similar stitches (mainly maps and
signposts), and I found that trying to optimize y,p,r,X,Y and Z all at
once introduces to many degrees of freedom, so the whole thing totally
fails. But you can still work on the whole image set at once if you
only only do a few parameters at a time. I often start out with just X
and Y and then take it from there, optimizing the others in turn. Once
everything has 'gelled' nicely, you can optimize more parameters
simultanously. Doing it this way is probably faster than introducing
the images one by one and estimating parameters. The process also
benefits from lots of CPs (like, 100-200 per pair).
This makes me wonder if there couldn't be a specific mosaic
optimization mode which follows such a pattern, thus avoiding the mess
that usually happens if you try optimizing everything at once.
Kay