bird
25-12-2005, 01:21 AM
So I've been whiling away the last few days on a major overhaul to ppmcentre, including name change for the package and a few new features.
The most important new feature will be "multipoint alignment", otherwise known as image morphing. The basic idea is to do a normal align as best you can and then start distorting parts of the image to make it match up with your reference frame even better.
I'm still a ways off having it working properly, but I thought you might like to see the output of the software as it currently stands - there are many artifacts (the horizontal/vertical lines) which will go away when I implement more of the algorithm that I have so far. What I have so far is a very crude test implementation.
The thing to notice about this image is that it's equally sharp all the way across - the algorithm tries to get all of each frame to line up with the reference frame.
This is also just a stack of 220 frames, so it's a bit noisy. However when you compare it to the earlier Theophilus (in the other thread) remember that the other image is a stack of about 2000 frames using registax, and it gets blurry when you look closer to the edges.
hmm, it's after midnight, so.... Merry Christmas!
Bird
The most important new feature will be "multipoint alignment", otherwise known as image morphing. The basic idea is to do a normal align as best you can and then start distorting parts of the image to make it match up with your reference frame even better.
I'm still a ways off having it working properly, but I thought you might like to see the output of the software as it currently stands - there are many artifacts (the horizontal/vertical lines) which will go away when I implement more of the algorithm that I have so far. What I have so far is a very crude test implementation.
The thing to notice about this image is that it's equally sharp all the way across - the algorithm tries to get all of each frame to line up with the reference frame.
This is also just a stack of 220 frames, so it's a bit noisy. However when you compare it to the earlier Theophilus (in the other thread) remember that the other image is a stack of about 2000 frames using registax, and it gets blurry when you look closer to the edges.
hmm, it's after midnight, so.... Merry Christmas!
Bird