From: Pam Niedermayer (pam_pine@cape.com)
Date: 01/05/01-07:42:37 AM Z
Thanks, Doug, I was looking for one of these PS tutorials, must have
cleaned up a bit much.
Pam
Doug Niven wrote:
>
> After much experimentation and wasting $ on various stitching programs, I
> have discovered the best by far is to use Photoshop. This technique
> leaves no "residue" or hints that they were stitched together, and it
> also looks the best by far. It may sound difficult at first, but I'd
> suggest spending the 30 minutes to figure it out. After that it becomes
> automatic and is actually easier than any of the commercial programs, and
> takes a lot less time. I've been using this to paste together both very
> high res files (which the commercial software won't stitch) and low res,
> it works equally well with both. I've been stitching together panoramas
> taken by Vietnamese war photographers 25-30 years ago, and you should see
> their faces once they see the finished product! This technique makes
> perfect seamless prints. And you will have a lot of flexibility that
> stitching software won't give you.
>
> This is it:
>
> Its all about adding something called a layer mask (and then Reveal All),
> and the whole process is explained very clearly on the URL below.
>
> http://www.leppphoto.com/TechTips/pano.html
> ...
-- Pamela G. Niedermayer Pinehill Softworks Inc. 600 W. 28th St., Suite 103 Austin, TX 78705 512-236-1677 http://www.pinehill.com
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