----- Original Message -----From:pt...@googlegroups.comTo:<pt...@googlegroups.com>Cc:Sent:Tue, 19 Feb 2013 06:35:49 -0800 (PST)Subject:[PTGui] Re: HowTo? reduce 10000+ px panos to 1024 px?
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- I've attempted this resolution reduction with CS5 by itself after the pano was created, and ... yuck.
- IIRC, in the past I tried multiple passes of CS5 as suggested by an article I came across, but ... yuck.
- Lynn since you consider the results from both PTGui and from CS5 to be
- 'yuck', I think you may have a wrong expectation here. Could you post
your result?
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why do you need to downsize?
can you just use a player that supports multi-res pano?
It all depends on what you want to achieve. So please state what you
want this downsized panorama for, show your current result and explain
why it is "yuck".
On Thursday, February 21, 2013 12:28:24 PM UTC-7, Erik Krause wrote:It all depends on what you want to achieve. So please state what you
want this downsized panorama for, show your current result and explain
why it is "yuck".Good questions ... here is my expectation:
I'll repeat the links to the "before" and "after".
I'll say I'm missing that long post with all the links.
with panos like the example in the previous post that started as 16320x5204, the down-sizing by CS5 has been unsatisfactory. I'll repeat the links to the "before" and "after".
On Thursday, February 21, 2013 12:28:24 PM UTC-7, Erik Krause wrote:It all depends on what you want to achieve. So please state what you
want this downsized panorama for, show your current result and explain
why it is "yuck".Good questions ... here is my expectation:to get a down-sized image from a ultra-high-res pano that looks as good as a normal non-pano that is down-sized.
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I do expect to get feedback other than "why did you submit this for C&C ... it looks way out of focus". ...
- can clearly make out "McCandless Truck Center" several miles away
issues aside, I enjoyed these images for the shear ability to virtually drive through town. Perhaps images such as this should be enjoyed in their full resolution glory.
By the way, the McCandless Truck Center is 1.5 miles out - at least now I know where a good shot of town can be acquired.
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I've looked at the images on your links. You are comparing apples and eggplants. When an image that is mostly black with a low density of very bright impulses is down-sampled by 20 and projected at the same size as the original, the dark background looks unchanged, but the bright points have grown in size by about 20 times 20 or 400. That makes the bright points look out of focus.
Your expectations are broken. Your night HDR does not survive desampling unaffected. Low dynamic range, high marking density images like your daytime image don't highlight the desampling artifacts to the same extent.
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To my shame, I'll acknowlege having plenty of low dynamic range images. :-)
I'm unclear what you mean by "high marking density images".
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In the night-lights image most of the image is nearly black with a scattering of very bright pixels -> low marking density. The daylight image has very few nearly black pixels and almost all pixels brightly lit -> high marking density. Compare histograms and see how much more of the daylight image is to the right.
Dale B. Dalrymple
You probably mean Joergen Geerds "luminous New York".
Yes, those are exceptional. He intentionally shoots HDR and doesn't saturate the images
that much hence they are easier to downsize.
I just use photoshop bicubic sharper to downsample.
I infer from your userid that you live in Utah, not C.Springs. Did you used to live here? Get back for visits?It's a Great! Location! that not many people seem to know about. In some ways, better than the GrandView overlook in Palmer Park.
Lynn, stuck in NJ (not that it's a bad place -
Google Earth is great for identifying the shooting location of most panoramas that have some recognizable features. I will look at Palmer Park also.
Would you also "dial down to zero" the ACR/LR setting for "Clarity", which I believe is a form of sharpening of mid-tones?