From the course: Shooting and Processing Panoramas

Unlock the full course today

Join today to access over 22,600 courses taught by industry experts or purchase this course individually.

Using Boundary Warp in Lightroom Classic

Using Boundary Warp in Lightroom Classic

From the course: Shooting and Processing Panoramas

Start my 1-month free trial

Using Boundary Warp in Lightroom Classic

- [Narrator] The Boundary Warp option selectively bends and stretches the pixels. In order to see this, make sure that the Auto Crop option is unchecked. Now what happens as you pull this, you'll notice that the gaps at the edge are filled in. Basically, the pixels get stretched and pulled to fill in the space, and this warping is very cool because it prevents you from having gaps in the panoramic image. Now, the use of this option is purely optional, but I find that in almost every case, Boundary Warp is quite useful. The only time it really is problematic is if you have a strong architectural pattern and you start to see distortions in your lines or patterns. But in most cases, like this one, Boundary Warp is quite efficient and makes it easy to fill in the gaps. When you're all set, you can click merge, or, in this case, I'm just going to click cancel and go on to one more type of merge.

Contents