![]() You can then take the small JPEGs into PTGui, use them to perform the stitching to get good alignment without bogging down your system, and then create a template of the stitch. A helpful workflow in this regard would be to use Photomatix to batch process each segment, outputting both a smallish JPEG with some default tonemapping, as well as a full res HDR file. Some people prefer to work this way, others prefer to use a batch processing HDR app, like Photomatix, to process their HDR segments first. ![]() You can choose the blending method to be either true HDR (i.e., it will output a HDR, EXR, etc.) or Exposure Fusion (a la enfuse) LDR output. ![]() ![]() PTGui Pro supports full HDR workflow - while it may not be the most efficient way, or give you the most control over your final image, you can literally drop a series of pano segments with multiple raw exposures per segment into PTGui and it will sort it all out, convert the raws and merge and stitch the images into a single, HDR pano.
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