Quote:
Originally Posted by mithrandir
Hmmm. I had those and think I know what went wrong. I had tried to remove the missing parts of the images by converting to png, adding an alpha channel, and deleting those black areas, hoping the blending would use the alpha to ignore those areas.
AutoPano decided it didn't like some frames, so it dropped them and rendered some of the remainder as one pano and others as another. I remapped the jpgs at higher accuracy, they all went into one pano, and then I deleted the bad frames.
I've never had to do it that way before.
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Is that in Photoshop? I didn't use the frames that had missing parts if that's what you refer to.
I pasted each frame into a separate layer, moved them around to fit and then manually blended the edges with a soft eraser tool. Then flattened the image and rotated until horizon was level.
I don't think they overlap enough for Photoshop to figure out an auto panorama, but I didn't try - it was just quick and dirty
