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Hello PT guys
I need some help on this. I get very often some strange patterns while making HDR panoramas. It looks like the different exposure bracketing images don´t really blend together softly creating a visible pattern.
Then I have a much brighter "North Pole" of the image what is defenitely wrong. The atmosphere in top of my position is much thinner and the sky should look darker and not brighter than the rest.
Is this a poralization issue maybe ? I used LightRoom and RAWTherapee to even the lens vignetting and merged in photoshop all images to an HDR and blended 17 HDRs to the image you see attached to the message. I tried also to to this with single images so no merging with Photoshop but I got the same result...
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Erik Krause
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Feb 11, 2021, 6:53:46 AM2/11/21
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Am 11.02.21 um 12:27 schrieb Marc Pasco:
> Is this a poralization issue maybe ? I used LightRoom and RAWTherapee to
> even the lens vignetting and merged in photoshop all images to an HDR and
> blended 17 HDRs to the image you see attached to the message. I tried also
> to to this with single images so no merging with Photoshop but I got the
> same result...
Looks like the zenith image is simply lighter. You can do exposure
optimization on Exposure/HDR tab or manually decrease the brightness for
the relevant image on Image Parameters tab (Exposure Compensation column).
--
Erik Krause
Marc Pasco
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Feb 11, 2021, 7:41:30 AM2/11/21
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"Looks like the zenith image is simply lighter."
That would be weird as all images were shot with exact the same settings; 9 images with exposures from -5 EV to +5EV. White Balance, Focus, set to manually
John Houghton
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Feb 11, 2021, 7:54:23 AM2/11/21
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On Thu, Feb 11, 2021 at 12:41 PM Marc Pasco <mpas...@gmail.com> wrote:
"Looks like the zenith image is simply lighter."
That would be weird as all images were shot with exact the same settings; 9 images with exposures from -5 EV to +5EV. White Balance, Focus, set to manually
.... and were the actual exposure times/aperture settings/ISO settings the same in each bracketed set? I.e. shot in manual exposure mode, not Av mode.
It cane be useful to select Unblended mode in the Panorama Editor window to reveal exposure differences between images more clearly.
John
PTGui Support
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Feb 11, 2021, 9:43:44 AM2/11/21
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Hi Marc,
It's probably because you are tone mapping before stitching. Each image
will come out with a different brightness, depending on what's in the frame.
Try switching the panorama editor to 'Unblended' mode to see if this is
indeed the problem. You'll want all frames to have approximately the
same brightness.
It's better to do tone mapping as a final step after stitching. Check
out the HDR video tutorial on the PTGui website.