Ptgui forum5/7/2023 I initially didn't think this would work. Stop your recording in the actions panel. Use Image>Canvas Size to Expand the size of the canvas to 4096x2048 (or whatever size you want to render your final video out)ġ0. I was able to get the image to match very closely in all areas except the extreme edges.ĩ. This took several minutes for me to transform the fisheye layer to match as closely as possible to the equirectangular layer underneath. Use Edit>Transform>Warp on the top fisheye layer. Use Image>Canvas Size to expand the size of the canvas by about 120% (so that you will have enough room for the transform controls in the next step)Ĩ. Start Recording your action in the actions panel.ħ. I scaled (if necessary) the equirectangular layer and positioned it to match directly under the top fisheye layer.Ħ. I set the top fisheye layer to 50% transparent.ĥ. I took the PTGui 360x180 equirectangular image into photoshop and placed it under the first layer.ĥ. I took the single frame of fisheye video into photoshop.Ĥ. I brought that frame into PTGui and made a 360x180 equirectangular version of it.ģ. I converted a single frame of a fisheye video to a still image.Ģ. To make the action I did the following.ġ. Apply the Photoshop action to the video to convert it to 360x180 equirectangular video. This action works on every video shot with the same lens.Ģ. I manually created a Photoshop 'action' that takes the fisheye lens and converts it into a 360x180 equirectangular image. Convert the image sequence back into video. Use PTGui to create a 360x180 equirectangular image set.ģ. Convert the fisheye video into an image sequenceĢ. I have a Nikon D610 with a 180 degree fisheye lens.ġ. I searched around and couldn't find anything. in-2012.0/ >An also highly recommended (but commercial, e.g.I'm not sure if you ever found a way to do this. >If that latest official build doesn't behave on your Mac (or >you have troubles with the new user interface) I'd recommend >hugin-mac-2012.0.0.dmg (as of ) which is available here: >. s/en.shtml >Full documatation is here: >It's Open Source and available from >The latest build for Mac OS X (version Hugin-2014.0.0.dmg as of >) is reported to have some problems with 10.10 >(Yosemite) but usually works great if you're still on 10.6 to 10.9. >See this tutorial to get an idea of the basic concepts (control >points etc.). >You can try if the basic assistant based workflow works for you. It's a full >featured panorama stitcher but usually works great for the >casual user who just wants to stitch a few overlapping images. Best of wishes, /Per, 10:53, skrev Carl von Einem : >Hi Batshua, >you can try the stitching application Hugin. It's got a simple and straightforward interface and has served me well. > Thanks for your time! > BatshuaĪ commercial but a bit cheaper solution (than PTgui) is DoubleTake. I'd consider springing for an upgrade > to GC 9 rather than buying other software if the feature in question was > available in 9 but not in 8. I see a lot of software on the > market made just for this task, but given that I already have GC 8, I'd > much rather go with what I know. shareware) alternative would be Cheers, Carl Batshua bat Yehonatan wrote on 08.03.15 02:07: > Does GC 8 have the ability to stitch two images together (such as in a > panorama, or in my case, vertically)? If not, does GC 9? Doing this > manually is tedious and challenging. in-2012.0/ An also highly recommended (but commercial, e.g. If that latest official build doesn't behave on your Mac (or you have troubles with the new user interface) I'd recommend hugin-mac-2012.0.0.dmg (as of ) which is available here. s/en.shtml Full documatation is here: It's Open Source and available from The latest build for Mac OS X (version Hugin-2014.0.0.dmg as of ) is reported to have some problems with 10.10 (Yosemite) but usually works great if you're still on 10.6 to 10.9. See this tutorial to get an idea of the basic concepts (control points etc.). You can try if the basic assistant based workflow works for you. It's a full featured panorama stitcher but usually works great for the casual user who just wants to stitch a few overlapping images. Hi Batshua, you can try the stitching application Hugin.
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