Am 27.03.2014 02:30, schrieb Adam Pass:
> I will have to spend some time experimenting with your suggestions. I
> have tried to generate more control points and it doesn't seem to
> have much of an effect. I don't have the pro version. What effect
> will viewpoint correction have on the stitch?
Viewpoint correction is intended to correct images not taken from the
same viewpoint. However, as you see in
http://www.ptgui.com/examples/vptutorial.html this works perfectly only
for flat surfaces. But it can sometimes help stitching panoramas with
slightly varying viewpoint (at the expense of buildings leaning over a bit).
> Will it help line up the images more seamlessly? If so I will
> purchase the pro version. As far as the other possibilities, they
> seem to get more time consuming.
The big benefit of photomerge is the photoshop autoblend algorithm. It
calculates seams such that they go through regions with least details
which obviously hides errors best. PTGui doesn't do this, it places the
seam in the middle of the overlap. But it allows to use external
programs as a plugin. One of those is smartblend, which does a pretty
good seam optimization.
The other possibility is to use photoshop autoblend, which isn't only
better but also much faster than smartblend. You need to create a PSD or
PSB with individual layers only from PTGui, load it into photoshop,
duplicate it, use Eric Gerds "Shift half width" script (see link last
mail) on one of them. Then select all layers and choose "Auto blend
layers" from Edit menu on both. Flatten both and use "Shift half width"
on one of them agin, then Shift-Drag one from the layers palette on top
of the other, add a mask and mask the visible seam with a soft large
brush. All this takes usually 2 to 3 minutes and you can even automate
it recording an action.
I've done that on your un-altered project. Here's the downsized result:
http://ge.tt/3TonvAU1/v/0