A Abuddlah New Member Jan 24, 2011 #1 Guys, recently I'm quite interested in taking Panorama photos, but I don't know which software is good for processing. Any ideas?
Guys, recently I'm quite interested in taking Panorama photos, but I don't know which software is good for processing. Any ideas?
chiangkxv Senior Member Jan 24, 2011 #2 Abuddlah said: Guys, recently I'm quite interested in taking Panorama photos, but I don't know which software is good for processing. Any ideas? Click to expand... I'm using ptgui for pano stitching.
Abuddlah said: Guys, recently I'm quite interested in taking Panorama photos, but I don't know which software is good for processing. Any ideas? Click to expand... I'm using ptgui for pano stitching.
N NedKelly New Member Jan 24, 2011 #4 I am using Autopano Pro Giga. Not free. Free programs that have been tried and tested Hugin (more popular) Microsoft ICE (less popular but those who have tried claims it to be very efficient) I have used all 3 including Photoshop's own pano in CS4 or CS5. Some work better in certain situations. I prefer APG in general.
I am using Autopano Pro Giga. Not free. Free programs that have been tried and tested Hugin (more popular) Microsoft ICE (less popular but those who have tried claims it to be very efficient) I have used all 3 including Photoshop's own pano in CS4 or CS5. Some work better in certain situations. I prefer APG in general.
Doctor Inferno Member Jan 24, 2011 #5 I find that Photoshop CS5 is the best so far for aligning and stitching photos together.
P PhotoDude New Member Jan 31, 2011 #6 I use the panorama automation tool that is included in my PS CS3.
giantcanopy Senior Member Feb 1, 2011 #7 The photomerge function in adobe Photoshop works great for me most of the time. In the occassion the stitching is not good my old autopano software usually does the trick. Ryan
The photomerge function in adobe Photoshop works great for me most of the time. In the occassion the stitching is not good my old autopano software usually does the trick. Ryan
H hazmee Senior Member Feb 1, 2011 #9 If you have spare cash, PTGUI is the best I've ever used so far.
L loneWolff Deregistered Feb 2, 2011 #11 CS Photoshop's photomerge works for me but it can only go 360. I want a true 360 all surround stitching
CS Photoshop's photomerge works for me but it can only go 360. I want a true 360 all surround stitching