Many video editors have filters that can be applied to accomplish the same results, more or less. For still images, I use Adobe Photoshop Elements ( the non-subscription step child to the pro version). For videos, I use Kdenlive with 2 filters applied, DeFish and Corners.
I did photoshop for a custom lab for many years. Plenty of architectural work. I had to do (let's call it set extension) to correct for parallex, and also over development on the edges of 4x5 negatives which would print lighter. Manually dodging and burning the edges of skies would require many attempts to get it to be unnoticeable. Scanning those negs and cloning the skies was way more efficient, and later printing you had the corrected file saved to disc to work from. You would ask photographers to back off, zoom out, etc., when they shot for clients to give you more room for post correction, but interior photographers were stuck with only so much room. Meanwhile you were cloning out the legs or shadows of their light stands, etc. They got their money's worth.
Many video editors have filters that can be applied to accomplish the same results, more or less. For still images, I use Adobe Photoshop Elements ( the non-subscription step child to the pro version). For videos, I use Kdenlive with 2 filters applied, DeFish and Corners.
Hi! This is great advice. Thank you!
I did photoshop for a custom lab for many years. Plenty of architectural work. I had to do (let's call it set extension) to correct for parallex, and also over development on the edges of 4x5 negatives which would print lighter. Manually dodging and burning the edges of skies would require many attempts to get it to be unnoticeable. Scanning those negs and cloning the skies was way more efficient, and later printing you had the corrected file saved to disc to work from. You would ask photographers to back off, zoom out, etc., when they shot for clients to give you more room for post correction, but interior photographers were stuck with only so much room. Meanwhile you were cloning out the legs or shadows of their light stands, etc. They got their money's worth.
Hi! Thank you for these comments. Indeed, correcting lines in the photos can be a lot of work.
Thanks Tom, i hope you are oké ! The video was useful for me! Thanks.
Hi Jan. I'm glad you found this video useful.
Thanks Tom. Best wishes
Hi Cliff. Thank you!
Thank you very much
I'm glad you liked the video. Best wishes!