Thanks for this tutorial Rob. It is amazing what the new tools bring to photography. I don't use much of perspective correction myself as I am not an architectural photographer. When I shoot architecture, such as skyscrapers, etc, I actually want some perspective distortion as that is what our eyes and brain do tend to view them. For example, taking a shot of a tower from the ground up, we cannot use perspective correction or it'll make the tower look weird. We need to use to tool intelligently!
Thanks. Yes, absolutely use in moderation. It's great for minor adjustments. A few degrees in any direction is best. More than that, it can get weird looking.
Thanks for the tutorial , looks like i'll have to DL photolab for a trial. I recognize all these photos when I stayed at that Hotel earlier this year I walked around that neighborhood taking photos. I never got to do any long exposures sadly...I guess next time.
Perfect explanation. The only think I miss with this tool is the ability to set a preset for slightly converging lines. The perfect vertical correction can look top-heavy in some cases.
I have not tested a preset. But with Advanced settings and Automode = Vertical & Horizontals - I can back off on the Up/Down slider and keep a slight vertical perspective. Thank you.
Thank you for the information on DXO Elite 6 lab features. I have been a long-time (silent) viewer of your tutorials and your work for a long time. I have a question about DXO's elite version. Does it have the equivalent of Adobe's Bridge to view and sort RAW (ORF or CR2/3) images? Thank you in advance.
Dear Rob, could you please check if there is auto lens correction support for Canon TSE 17mm + TSE 24mm as well as Voigtlander 10mm, 12mm, 15mm in Sony E mount in DXO PhotoLab 6 - Thank you so much !
I don't see any support for the tilt-shift lenses, which makes sense. I see the Voigtlander 100m f/5.6 but not the others. You can double check here www.dxo.com/supported-cameras/
Applying full perspective corrections makes your images look unnatural. Use the 0-100% slider to back of a bit and leave some perspective in the pictures.
You are the best teacher bar none.
Thanks. I try.
Thank you very much! Great Tutorial! Best wishes from Germany, Gustav
You are welcome!
Thanks for this tutorial Rob. It is amazing what the new tools bring to photography. I don't use much of perspective correction myself as I am not an architectural photographer. When I shoot architecture, such as skyscrapers, etc, I actually want some perspective distortion as that is what our eyes and brain do tend to view them. For example, taking a shot of a tower from the ground up, we cannot use perspective correction or it'll make the tower look weird. We need to use to tool intelligently!
Thanks. Yes, absolutely use in moderation. It's great for minor adjustments. A few degrees in any direction is best. More than that, it can get weird looking.
Great prestation of goog information
Thank you!
Thanks heaps for such a clear explanation Rob. TIL how to use these.
Happy to help, Paul. Thanks for your support and video suggestions!
Great videos you do thanks very much
Thanks, Anton. I try.
Excellent tutorial again. Thank you so much!
You're very welcome!
Brilliant as always thanks for sharing
Thank you! Cheers!
Thanks for another great DXO tutorial Rob. It can be tricky figuring out some of these tools, but you make it easy!
Thanks. I try.
Thanks for the tutorial , looks like i'll have to DL photolab for a trial. I recognize all these photos when I stayed at that Hotel earlier this year I walked around that neighborhood taking photos. I never got to do any long exposures sadly...I guess next time.
Small world. I'm sure you'll like Photolab. It's my favorite editor.
Perfect explanation. The only think I miss with this tool is the ability to set a preset for slightly converging lines. The perfect vertical correction can look top-heavy in some cases.
You can set the perspective correction to auto and then back the intensity slider and save it as a preset. Does that work?
I have not tested a preset. But with Advanced settings and Automode = Vertical & Horizontals - I can back off on the Up/Down slider and keep a slight vertical perspective. Thank you.
Thanks
Thank you!
Very nice. Thank you.
Thank you too!
Thank you for the information on DXO Elite 6 lab features. I have been a long-time (silent) viewer of your tutorials and your work for a long time. I have a question about DXO's elite version. Does it have the equivalent of Adobe's Bridge to view and sort RAW (ORF or CR2/3) images?
Thank you in advance.
Thanks!
Thank you!
Dear Rob, could you please check if there is auto lens correction support for Canon TSE 17mm + TSE 24mm as well as Voigtlander 10mm, 12mm, 15mm in Sony E mount in DXO PhotoLab 6 - Thank you so much !
I don't see any support for the tilt-shift lenses, which makes sense. I see the Voigtlander 100m f/5.6 but not the others. You can double check here www.dxo.com/supported-cameras/
DXO still didn't bother adding HSL into the local adjustments even though users have been asking for it for years.
I emailed them a list of things myself. I'd be happy if the white balance tool was the same with rgb files as it is with raw.
👍🙏
This was very helpfull! Ty
Applying full perspective corrections makes your images look unnatural. Use the 0-100% slider to back of a bit and leave some perspective in the pictures.
Definitely.
Great job. Thanks.
Thank you!
It is added in version 7