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  1. #1

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    panorama stitching

    Hi All:

    Can anyone recommend a pan stitching plug-in? I have been scanning 6x17 negs on a Nikon 9000 in three 6x6 pieces, making individual digital negs and then printing as a triptych. I would like to make one enlarged panorama format digital negative for contact printing. I run both PS7 and CS2 with Windows. Although I have been using PS since Version 4, I have never bought a 'plug-in', so take that into consideration if you describe your recommendation :o .

    Thank you, d

  2. #2

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    Do yourself a favor, download the beta version of PhotoShop CS3 and use its panoramic merge feature built into the program. You won't have to buy any 3rd party plug-in.

    SC2 and do a pretty good merge, but you have to use manually created layer masks to blend each panel.

    Watch this on-line movie. It will explain why you should use SC3

    http://av.adobe.com/russellbrown/CS3PhotoMergeSM.mov
    When I grow up, I want to be a photographer. :)

    http://www.walterpcalahan.com

  3. #3

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    Walt:
    Thank you. InCREDible. Brown calls it "magic" and he's not far wrong. I still think of masks as something you make in the darkroom with pin registration. I finally broke down and upgraded to CS2 a couple of weeks ago. I'm not sure my nervous system could adjust to CS3 so soon!

  4. #4
    ann
    ann is offline

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    i tried cs2 and it was ok but had issues of varies kinds. I tried several other software programs, and the best if found was from Serif , and was very reasonable . It also took a series of photos that none of the other programs could put together without showing a crooked roof line. It is based on a piece of software called Autostitch which is amazing.


    i will check out the video to see what is happening with CS3 but i hardly use CS2 let alone another version.

    thanks for the suggestion.

    ps. couldn't resist. check this website

    http://www.cs.ubc.ca/~mbrown/autostitch/autostitch.html

    this is some serious stitching.
    Last edited by ann; 04-05-2007 at 08:57 PM.

  5. #5

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    I think that 3rd party stitching software was probably a necessity a few years ago. Photoshop stitching is now good enough that in either CS2 or CS3 you can stick with the internal functions.

    Saw the link to Russell Preston Brown. Go to the Russell Preston Brown sight and download all sorts of goodies from the Good Doctor. His color to B&W conversion action is now my standard. It is wonderful.
    New Project! "The Shoshone Building" 04/27/2011

    www.joelipkaphoto.com

    150 posts and still blogging! Weekly photos and thoughts every Sunday.

    http://blog.joelipkaphoto.com/

  6. #6
    Don Bryant's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ann View Post
    i tried cs2 and it was ok but had issues of varies kinds. I tried several other software programs, and the best if found was from Serif , and was very reasonable . It also took a series of photos that none of the other programs could put together without showing a crooked roof line. It is based on a piece of software called Autostitch which is amazing.


    i will check out the video to see what is happening with CS3 but i hardly use CS2 let alone another version.

    thanks for the suggestion.

    ps. couldn't resist. check this website

    http://www.cs.ubc.ca/~mbrown/autostitch/autostitch.html

    this is some serious stitching.
    Ann, Denise and Joe,

    I had my first Photoshop CS2 stitching experience just last night prior to reading this thread. I was amazed at how easy the process was and what a good job CS2 did. Since getting my first DSLR a couple of weeks ago I'm certainly no expert with this sort of thing. I had tried the included PhotoStitch software that Canon makes and that was terrible, hence my total surprise with my results. The stitched sequences that I made were handheld off tripod.

    I'm sure the other stitching packages are pretty good, probably better than PS but CS2 was very easy to use.

    My 2 cents,

    Don Bryant

  7. #7

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    Hi All:

    As is happening so often lately, I think I'm asking a simple 'technical' question, and the answers send me off into flights of awe and creative fancy. This stuff is amazing. For now, I'll just be trying to learn how to make a pan digital neg, but there is a lot of potential here. I'm nominating panoramic photography as a category when jd gets a chance to expand the site.

    Denise

    p.s. One of the things I really love about this site is that the 'old digital pros' are so patient and helpful to us newbies. I've never gotten so much as a sniff that it's uncool to express slack-jawed wonder at it all. Thanks!

  8. #8
    Don Bryant's Avatar
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    Eating some crow

    Quote Originally Posted by dwross View Post
    Hi All:

    As is happening so often lately, I think I'm asking a simple 'technical' question, and the answers send me off into flights of awe and creative fancy. This stuff is amazing. For now, I'll just be trying to learn how to make a pan digital neg, but there is a lot of potential here. I'm nominating panoramic photography as a category when jd gets a chance to expand the site.

    Denise

    p.s. One of the things I really love about this site is that the 'old digital pros' are so patient and helpful to us newbies. I've never gotten so much as a sniff that it's uncool to express slack-jawed wonder at it all. Thanks!
    I took a very critical look at some of the stitchs I did yesterday with PS CS2 and found some really poor blends. So apparently CS3 out performs CS2 in this regard from other reports I've received from CS3 beta users.

    Don Bryant

  9. #9
    ann
    ann is offline

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    Don,

    that was what i found as well. very sutle, but none the less it showed.

    I did go on line and check out the brown video and when i have the chance i would certainly give cs3 a trial run.

    i also found that the cs2 had trouble with a row of roof lines from multi buildings and couldn't quited match them up altho the rest of the image looked fine.

    computers are such strange tools lol

  10. #10

    Join Date
    Oct 2006
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    I found even an old copy of PS Elements 2 and photomerge did a pretty good job of stitching two halves of a 4x5 that was scanned in two passes.

    For anything more complex, I've been getting very good results from the latest version of Hugin (hugin.sf.net). It's free and available for Windows, Mac and Linux. The tutorials on the site are quite helpful too.

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