From the course: Shooting and Processing Panoramas
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Compensating for lens distortion
From the course: Shooting and Processing Panoramas
Compensating for lens distortion
- Earlier, we explored using lens correction to remove distortion inside of the individual panels for the panoramic photo. I highly recommend you take advantage of that option inside the Adobe Camera Raw dialog. However, you might be using a lens and camera combination that hasn't been profiled, or maybe you have additional distortion just caused by how you shot the panoramic image. Let's tackle two of the images here that have a bit of distortion. Let's start here with the first one, and this one's pretty sold. It just feels like it's arching a little bit here, This is a very useful command that makes it easy Now, it starts to pick that up. It's pretty simple to adjust after the fact, and compensate for any perspective issues, like you see here. Then, if you want, you can easily scale up to fill those in. In this case, there's just a little bit less, so I'll click OK, and you see a few transparent pixels. Let's Control + Click to load the selection, and choose Select, Inverse. You…
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Initiating the Photomerge command from Bridge1m 11s
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Initiating the Photomerge command from Photoshop1m 21s
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Choosing an alignment method1m 33s
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Compensating for lens distortion5m 4s
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Blending the photos3m 24s
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Post merge cleanup3m 8s
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Using the Adaptive Wide Angle filter to remove distortion2m 59s
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Merging a 360-degree panoramic photo7m 19s
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Cleaning up VR images in Photoshop3m 23s
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Merging the GigaPan panoramic photo6m 27s
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Using Photoshop filters to enhance panoramas5m 32s
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