This video demonstrates how to use the Lens Correction filter to remove distortion. This tool can fix many problems including fisheye, perspective issues, chromatic aberration and edge vignetting.
Products covered:
Product Version: CC
Views: 533
Runtime: 00:02:10
Tags:
Design Standard
,
Photoshop
,
CS6
,
Richard Harrrington
Learn how to create the highest quality photographs by learning how to crop, remove lens distortion, correct perspective, make global and local color and tonal corrections in the Lightroom 4 Develop module.
Products covered:
Views: 147,263
Runtime: 00:22:15
Tags:
Develop Module
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RGB
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Tone Curve
,
process version
,
sharpening
,
Clarity
,
Global Adjustments
,
Lightroom 4
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Local Adjustments
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Moire
Here we show how Adaptive Wide-Angle correction can be applied non-destructively to adjust for lens distortion caused by using a wide-angle lens, and be used to straighten the image.
Products covered:
Product Version: CC
Views: 440
Runtime: 00:05:26
Tags:
Design Standard
,
Photoshop
,
CS6
,
Richard Harrrington
Learn some advanced tips and techniques for working with Adaptive Wide Angle inside of Adobe Photoshop CS6. This tutorial will give you a detailed look at the built-in correction tools that help you adjust the lens distortion in your own images. If you are ready to move to the next level in Adaptive Wide Angle then this video is for you.
Dramatically improve the quality of your images by automatically removing lens artifacts such as geometric distortion, chromatic aberration, and vignetting. Photoshop CS5 instantly applies the right correction based on the camera and lens used to shoot the image. Now you can quickly create and deliver the highest quality images, and even get better results with HDR merges and panoramas.
Perfect your images by reducing lens defects like geometric distortion, chromatic aberration, and vignetting. Save time by combining crop, straighten, and perspective correction in one operation.
Automatically correct lens distortions and fix chromatic aberration and vignetting with Photoshop CS5 and Photoshop CS5 Extended, which use an image file’s EXIF data to make precise adjustments based on the type of camera and lens you used.