gefillmore
Jan-29-2006, 04:54 AM
I have not seen this technique mentioned anywhere for matching photos in panorama-
the technique on its own is well documented and very well may be mentioned as something to use when working on panoramas; I just have not seen it, but on the other hand, I don't want to take credit where credit is not due; I apologize if I am being redundant-
having gotten that out of the way, here is the technique:
when matching pics in a panorama, I find that the exposure and therefore the brightness might differ in each pic-
if a pic is off, I choose its layer, create a duplicate layer, go to the dropdown at opacity and choose multiply to darken or screen to lighten, then use the slider to match it up-
that's it!
george
the technique on its own is well documented and very well may be mentioned as something to use when working on panoramas; I just have not seen it, but on the other hand, I don't want to take credit where credit is not due; I apologize if I am being redundant-
having gotten that out of the way, here is the technique:
when matching pics in a panorama, I find that the exposure and therefore the brightness might differ in each pic-
if a pic is off, I choose its layer, create a duplicate layer, go to the dropdown at opacity and choose multiply to darken or screen to lighten, then use the slider to match it up-
that's it!
george