Difference between revisions of "Hugin Crop tab"

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(basic page describing the hugin crop tab)
 
(more crop tab info)
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* With a circular [[Fisheye Projection]] image there are black unexposed areas around the image circle.
 
* With a circular [[Fisheye Projection]] image there are black unexposed areas around the image circle.
 
* Some lenses have a lot of flaring around the edges which you don't want to keep.
 
* Some lenses have a lot of flaring around the edges which you don't want to keep.
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 +
Depending on the input image type, cropping has two different behaviours:
 +
 +
* For circular fisheye photos the crop area is a circle.
 +
* For any other input image, the crop areas is a rectangle.
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 +
Change the input image type in the [[Hugin Camera and Lens tab]].
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 +
The '''Crop''' tab features four text boxes for '''Left''', '''Top''', '''Right''' and '''Bottom'''
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where you can manually enter the positions of the four edges.  The origin is top left and numbers
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indicate the distance in pixels from this origin.
 +
 +
Note that numbers can negative and can extend beyond the width and height of the photo, this is
 +
primarily useful for partial fisheye images where the full circle is not visible, so the crop circle
 +
extends beyond the picture frame.
 +
 +
The default '''Always center crop on d,e''' assumes that all cropping is symmetrical around the
 +
optical centre of the lens.  This is normal unless you are using the crop feature to
 +
remove lens flare in which case the crop may need to be asymmetrical.
 +
 +
Select the image to be cropped in the list to the left, you can adjust the position of the crop area
 +
by dragging the perimeter in the image preview on the right.

Revision as of 00:44, 16 March 2007

Use the Crop tab to indicate the areas of the input images that hugin should be excluded from the stitching output. Note that unlike PTGui, setting crop parameters in hugin doesn't change the Field of View or optical centre of your images, it simply indicates areas of the image to be masked out.

(In detail, hugin uses the S 'selection' parameter in the i and o script lines instead of the C 'crop' parameter)

There are three situations where you might want to use crop parameters in hugin:

  • With a scanned input image, there are usually black edges or marks along the sides of the image.
  • With a circular Fisheye Projection image there are black unexposed areas around the image circle.
  • Some lenses have a lot of flaring around the edges which you don't want to keep.

Depending on the input image type, cropping has two different behaviours:

  • For circular fisheye photos the crop area is a circle.
  • For any other input image, the crop areas is a rectangle.

Change the input image type in the Hugin Camera and Lens tab.

The Crop tab features four text boxes for Left, Top, Right and Bottom where you can manually enter the positions of the four edges. The origin is top left and numbers indicate the distance in pixels from this origin.

Note that numbers can negative and can extend beyond the width and height of the photo, this is primarily useful for partial fisheye images where the full circle is not visible, so the crop circle extends beyond the picture frame.

The default Always center crop on d,e assumes that all cropping is symmetrical around the optical centre of the lens. This is normal unless you are using the crop feature to remove lens flare in which case the crop may need to be asymmetrical.

Select the image to be cropped in the list to the left, you can adjust the position of the crop area by dragging the perimeter in the image preview on the right.