> I have an usual task at hand, which is to stitch together small maps
> into a bigger global map.
[...]
Have you already checked out the tutorial by Bruno Postle?
http://hugin.sourceforge.net/tutorials/scans/
cu andreas
--
`What a good friend you are to him, Dr. Maturin. His other friends are
so grateful to you.'
`I sew his ears on from time to time, sure'
are you sure you have a license to use these maps in JOSM? As an
OpenStreetMap Contributor you are only allowed to use data you are
allowed to use. See
<http://www.osmfoundation.org/wiki/License/Contributor_Terms_Summary>.
Carl
Olivier Croquette schrieb am 06.12.10 11:29:
I too am interested in putting together different takes of a flat
surface carrying an image : painted wall, frescoes, or even possibly a
building front far enough that parallax does not matter too much
regarding small features. Scans would actually be the simplest case.
I know of the scans tutorial. But it seems to assume that it is the
same as photographs of flat surfaces, with the camera directed
perpendicular to the surface, and at constant distance from the
surface.
I want something different : to assemble images of a flat surface,
actually taken with a camera, but from different places and with
different orientations of the camera and different distances from the
surface. As far as I know (but I am not an expert) this uses different
algorithmics (projective geometry) to put the various images together,
than that used for stitching spherical images all taken fron a single
point. I doubt that using the standard Hugin code, as suggested in
the tutorial, would do the job, though most features of Hugin would
still be needed.
Can you comment or help me with proper pointers ?
Bernard
* Andreas Metzler <amet...@downhill.at.eu.org>, le 04-12-10, a �crit:
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Bernar...@datcha.net ,_ /\o \o/ gsm +33 6 6206 1693
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Je n'exprime que mon opinion - I express only my opinion
CAGED BEHIND WINDOWS or FREE WITH LINUX
No, I was not. I have not been using Hugin for a few years. Too busy.
I looked at the tutorials at the time, but I do not recall that this
one existed. Is it a recent development ?
I guess most of the hugin machinery is common, but flat mosaic
stiching uses a different kernel algorithm than spheric stiching. It
is a different kind of geometric problem. Isn't that correct ?
Anyway, thanks a lot for the pointers. I have plenty of frescoes and
murals to stitch.
The next step is dealing with angles in the wall, or with curving wall
(cylinders). I know algorithms have been developed for that for the
purpose of scanning books without flattening the pages. Curvature can
be inferred from edges (or straight lines in the picture) and from
lighting variations, I think.
Bien cordialement
Bernard
* kfj <_k...@yahoo.com>, le 07-12-10, a �crit:
I am stitching microscope images but it would ruin it if i optimized roll, x, and y. So I only optimize x and y. This gives me PERFECT stitchings every time. w00t!
jordan
>resolution needs to be by factors higher, plus there are 12 times more
>input pictures, so the size of the final picture is not manageable by
>home computers.
>To solve this, Hugin would have output tiles of the big picture
>instead of a single file, without loading the whole in memory. I could
>imagine this requires quite some design changes.
There is a 'gigatile' tool which uses the Hugin cropping feature to
render the output as multiple 4096x4096 tiles:
http://search.cpan.org/dist/Panotools-Script/bin/gigatile
It also generates a JPEG pyramid for viewing with the Google Maps
API, but you don't need this bit (and it would be nice if someone
fixed it to use OSM rather than Google Maps).
--
Bruno
I only found a German description how to start JOSM with more memory via
the command line:
<http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/DE:JOSM/Anleitung#Start_.C3.BCber_Kommandozeile>
For the Mac version there is also a description in English:
<http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/JOSM/Mac#memory>
On my OS X system this command works:
java -Xmx1G -jar
/Applications/josm-macosx/JOSM.app/Contents/Resources/Java/josm-snapshot-3376.jar
Note that on Mac OS X one has to open the JOSM.app bundle to get the
correct name of the .jar file.
Carl
http://turingmachine.org/~dmg/temp/rip2.jpg
--dmg
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