From the course: Shooting and Processing Panoramas
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Initiating the Photomerge command from Bridge
From the course: Shooting and Processing Panoramas
Initiating the Photomerge command from Bridge
the photo merge command is right from Adobe Bridge. This is because you can use an intuitive, visual based browser to find the images that you want to process. Once you've found them, it's very simple And I can now choose tools, Photoshop, photo merge. This will load all of the images in, and you'll see many different methods. In this case, since I have a strong image, I'm going to choose to work with the cylindrical method, and I'll just keep these pretty basic and tell it to blend together. Later on, you can take a look at advanced options or geometry correction, but in this case, since we're so close to the subject, I'm going to skip that option. It takes just a little bit, but pretty quickly, Photoshop should be able to detect the edges Photoshop should be able to detect the edges and line these up into a new image like you see here. And that worked quite well. And that worked quite well. In this case, we now have a new photo, with some empty areas, or transparent…
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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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