Stitching HDR panos with PTGui
I am interested in stitching some HDR RAW pano files. In reading the features of PTGui professional it appears that it will stitch pano images that are shot in HDR. Has anyone used this feature? I am especially interested in how it returns the final stitched image? Will this be file be in RAW which can then be corrected when opening in Bridge, or is the final file processed in PTGui and returned as a Tiff filel?
Sandy
Re: Stitching HDR panos with PTGui
I have a very little experience with it. It is best to do your raw conversions first before importing to the software. IME you get better results that way. It will not output raw.
Re: Stitching HDR panos with PTGui
There are various workflows possible for stitching HDR panoramas. The Photomatix FAQ gives you a brief introduction into this:
http://www.hdrsoft.com/support/faq_p...tix.html#panos
No image editing software will return raw files once it has done some processing on them. To be able to process a raw file, it needs to be converted first, and this process cannot be reversed. So, PTGui will output standard JPEG, TIFF, or Photoshop files.
Cheers,
Andreas
Re: Stitching HDR panos with PTGui
I recommend optimizing the files in a raw converter. Output those files to a good HDR program, such as Photomatix. Edit the files in your HDR program and output 16 bit-per-channel Tiffs. Stitch the tiffs with a good pano software, such as PTgui or Autopano Giga. Both have free trials.
Re: Stitching HDR panos with PTGui
Thanks for suggestions.
I downloaded a preview version of PTGui and experimented with some HDR pano shots. The software did a pretty good job of merging the HDR shots (with something called exposure fusion, which is described as not true HDR) and then creating the pano. The process was quite time consuming, however, with a MacBook Pro with 8gb of RAM so I don't think this method would be viable when traveling with a Macbook Air and only 2gb of RAM.
Another issue is that the final pano was an 8-bit jpeg (starting with RAW HDR shots), but perhaps this was because of the limitation of the trial version of PTGui.
I am tempted to purchase the software but the professional version is fairly expensive, and it seems that I could do this faster with CS5 by first merging the files to HDR and then running the photomerge command.
Sandy
Re: Stitching HDR panos with PTGui
Quote:
Originally Posted by
sanking
I am tempted to purchase the software but the professional version is fairly expensive, and it seems that I could do this faster with CS5 by first merging the files to HDR and then running the photomerge command.
Sandy
Yes, this can work well for many images. Just use the same HDR settings for each image stack for the entire series of images, then use Photomerge on the HDR results of each stack.
Re: Stitching HDR panos with PTGui
Photomatix, for example, suggests that it's better to do raw processing or noise reduction in a dedicated program, even though P-matix offers those features. They get added because the marketing department feels they need them to stay competitive, but these smaller companies often don't have the resources to produce truly first rate non-core features.
Photoshop can do a bunch of these things quite well, but they have a different character than what can be done in dedicated software. For example, PTgui and Autopano can be successful with panos that completely stump Photomerge in Photoshop, but it only pays to get the dedicated programs if you really need what they can do.
If you have a Windows machine, you should check out Microsoft Ice: http://research.microsoft.com/en-us/...roups/ivm/ice/
As an aside, when I do exposure bracketing, I often use a type of exposure fusion over true hdr-tonemapping. Fusion often leads to a much more realistic portrayal.
Re: Stitching HDR panos with PTGui
Sandy,
For HDR (or multi-exposure) stitching I process all of the multi-exposure RAW frames first. Usually this means I adjust the normal or 0 exposure first for CA and lens corrections, and possibly some noise reduction first or upscale the pixel size and then sync all of the frames.
I then process the HDR groups to obtain a blended exposure and save as a single TIFF. I don't normally do edgy tone mapping, rather I just try extend the DR of the image. I then stitch in PS5. The PS5 stitching utility has gotten pretty good but it will still get confused occasionally. After that I will do more work typically in LR and then possibly later again in PS. Needless to say I only do this with 'keepers'. Often I will just perform a quick and dirty stitch of the zero exposure frame to to see how well they will stitch together.
I've easily made 17 x 24 inch prints with a G10 working this way which have MF image quality. I work slowly, use a bubble level and give my images extra space around the frame for later cropping. Over time I've learned to just add more frames to the sequence. Experience helps
For me PTGui's expense isn't worth it, but it maybe a better tool.
If the rules allowed I would post an example here made with the G10.
Don Bryant
Re: Stitching HDR panos with PTGui
As an aside, it's not all that hard to put together a nodal slide, or even a 3d panorama head.
Re: Stitching HDR panos with PTGui
Quote:
Originally Posted by
Peter J. De Smidt
As an aside, it's not all that hard to put together a nodal slide, or even a 3d panorama head.
Well I have a Gigapan unit but it sits at home most of the time. Way to bulky to fool with. And all of the other gizmos seem to be expensive too. The RRS pano systems to be very nice but way too expensive. I've tried a friend's RRS pano rig and it too adds bulk and e$pen$e I prefer not to have.