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Autostitch in Capture One

Kommentare

9 Kommentare

  • John Doe
    I wouldn't use it, but if you think it's important you can file a feature request (link in my signature).
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  • Permanently deleted user
    It would be very useful to me as well. The one and only thing I still use LR for is stitching panos into a DNG file which is very powerful. I then edit the Pano DNG file in Capture One, but would much rather do it all in C1
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  • Permanently deleted user
    I wouldn't rate it as a high demand feature, but it would be neat to have.

    I use my old Canon rebel for stitches/panos, so I'm fine with Lightroom compiling the DNG to edit in Capture One. For my Fuji however, I can't allow ACR to touch my files at all.
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  • Stefan Deutsch
    Thank you for the replies. I thougt, feature requests would also land here.
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  • SFA
    [quote="Kakaotrinker" wrote:
    Thank you for the replies. I thougt, feature requests would also land here.


    This is intended to be, mainly, a User to User forum.

    Phase like to manage problems, ideas, requests for information and almost everything else through their Support Case system. That means they record things that are of enough interest to people to have those people create a request, they have a description of the requirement as requested and can match that up with other similar requests to see how much interest there might be. It is a way of helping management decide where the use of resources would offer the most benefit to the most users.

    On the other hand there are a lot of image stitching programs around and there may not be very many people (by numbers and in commercial terms) who are totally committed to producing a lot of stitched images. The development effort required to make a top class stitching tool would likely very significant and must surely be a rather specialised development area.

    However, I am sure the Phase management team will welcome the opportunity to consider your suggestion.


    HTH.


    Grant
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  • Michael Iannantuoni
    MS ICE works well at stitching RAW files and can save a 16-bit TIF for editng in C1.
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  • Permanently deleted user
    [quote="Michael-I" wrote:
    MS ICE works well at stitching RAW files and can save a 16-bit TIF for editng in C1.


    I have ICE and had no idea that you can stitch RAW files. If it outputs a TIF file though, it's really no longer a RAW format like LR does with the DNG format
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  • Ian Wilson
    Moderator
    Top Commenter
    [quote="Canon_Shoe" wrote:
    [quote="Michael-I" wrote:
    MS ICE works well at stitching RAW files and can save a 16-bit TIF for editng in C1.


    I have ICE and had no idea that you can stitch RAW files. If it outputs a TIF file though, it's really no longer a RAW format like LR does with the DNG format

    But surely a "stitched raw" file is by definition no longer a raw file - that is the unaltered output from the camera sensor.

    I used to use ICE some years ago, and got good results (stitching JPGs) but then I switched to a Mac from Windows, so I couldn't use it anymore.

    My approach to sticking panoramas (which I only do occasionally) is to use manual settings on the camera when I take the shots so that WB, aperture, shutter speed and focus). Then I import to Capture One and process the files in the exact same way (generally processing a middle shot from the sequence and then copying all adjustments to the other files). Then I export the images as TIFF or as JPG and stitch them with Affinity Photo (although you could obviously use other apps).

    Ian
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  • Permanently deleted user
    [quote="Ian3" wrote:
    [quote="Canon_Shoe" wrote:
    [quote="Michael-I" wrote:
    MS ICE works well at stitching RAW files and can save a 16-bit TIF for editng in C1.


    I have ICE and had no idea that you can stitch RAW files. If it outputs a TIF file though, it's really no longer a RAW format like LR does with the DNG format

    But surely a "stitched raw" file is by definition no longer a raw file - that is the unaltered output from the camera sensor.

    I used to use ICE some years ago, and got good results (stitching JPGs) but then I switched to a Mac from Windows, so I couldn't use it anymore.

    My approach to sticking panoramas (which I only do occasionally) is to use manual settings on the camera when I take the shots so that WB, aperture, shutter speed and focus). Then I import to Capture One and process the files in the exact same way (generally processing a middle shot from the sequence and then copying all adjustments to the other files). Then I export the images as TIFF or as JPG and stitch them with Affinity Photo (although you could obviously use other apps).

    Ian


    Yes, but the final stitched file is a DNG so has all the flexibility of a RAW file. The one and only thing LR has over C1 in my opinion. Very powerful feature that I like and I wish C1 had it
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