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  1. #1

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    Perspective Controls with Photoshop

    Does anyone know of a good tutorial on using perspective controls with Photoshop to simulate what we do with view camera movements? I have been using a lot of medium format film for architectural work over the past several years and have found some pretty useful ways to change perspective through the Edit>Transform>Distort controls. However, my skills with Photoshop are not cutting edge and I suspect there must be someone out there light years ahead of me with this kind of work.

    Sandy King

  2. #2
    jd callow's Avatar
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    Sandy I use distort (and sometimes skew) as well, perspective in photoshop doesn't seem to correct convergence as well as it creates it.

    I simply create a guide to align to and distort generally a selection or the entire image. I do not do this in steps. If the first try isn't perfect I 'undo' and try again. Each distortion degrades the image and 2 incremental steps is worse than one good one.

    Hope that helps.

  3. #3

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    Quote Originally Posted by jd callow View Post
    Sandy I use distort (and sometimes skew) as well, perspective in photoshop doesn't seem to correct convergence as well as it creates it.

    I simply create a guide to align to and distort generally a selection or the entire image. I do not do this in steps. If the first try isn't perfect I 'undo' and try again. Each distortion degrades the image and 2 incremental steps is worse than one good one.

    Hope that helps.

    JD,

    In what way is the image degraded? Other than the visual changes one sees with the distortion.


    Sandy

  4. #4
    jd callow's Avatar
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    play with it a bit and see for your self. Sharpness and detail gets muddied. It is similar to rotating an image 30 degrees once or 5 times in 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 degree increments.

  5. #5
    tom_micklin's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by sanking View Post
    Does anyone know of a good tutorial on using perspective controls with Photoshop to simulate what we do with view camera movements? I have been using a lot of medium format film for architectural work over the past several years and have found some pretty useful ways to change perspective through the Edit>Transform>Distort controls. However, my skills with Photoshop are not cutting edge and I suspect there must be someone out there light years ahead of me with this kind of work.

    Sandy King
    Sandy,
    I've been using this little widget and getting good results.
    http://epaperpress.com/ptlens/
    Regards,
    Tom

  6. #6
    Don Bryant's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by tom_micklin View Post
    Sandy,
    I've been using this little widget and getting good results.
    http://epaperpress.com/ptlens/
    Regards,
    Tom
    I agree with Tom about PTLens, it can correct some problems quite well and for the price of the registered copy it's quite worth the cost, however I'm not sure it will do all of what Sandy needs to do.

    My 2 cents,

    Don

  7. #7

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    Quote Originally Posted by Don Bryant View Post
    I agree with Tom about PTLens, it can correct some problems quite well and for the price of the registered copy it's quite worth the cost, however I'm not sure it will do all of what Sandy needs to do.

    My 2 cents,

    Don

    Well, I am all MAC for image processing and from what I read PTLens is only for Windows?

    Anyway, I was hoping there would be a tutorial somewhere by someone who really knew this subject well. I have been doing it myself for several years pretty much as JD described so I know what I am doing, but creative people always come up with new and interesting ways of doing the same thing so I am interested in how other people solve perspective problems.

    Sandy King

  8. #8

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    Sandy,

    I use distort/lens correction on CS2. It seems to work pretty well for correcting distortion (keystoning) but the trade off is that you lose part of the image. I have learned to shoot the image allowing for that in the final output.

    I am not sure what CS3 has going for it in that area.

  9. #9

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    Sandy,

    I have found Martin Evening's book "Adobe Photoshop for Photographer's" (ISBN 0 240 51984 1) and the accompanying DVD invaluable.

    For perpective control I generally use the crop tool with Perspective checked.

    Best,
    Rory

  10. #10

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    Geez, you PhotoShoppers

    To be honest: I don't have PS and never will. In my eyes it's a 'I-can-do-it-all-but-nothing-perfect' application.

    To correct converging lines there is only one rock solid tool on the market:

    http://www.marcus-hebel.de/foto/links.html

    But be warned: if you have large scans (i.e. from 6x9 @ 2.400 ppi or higher) you really should be blessed with patience

    I've been in contact with Marcus and he is planning to fix the speed in one of the next versions - which means sometimes next year or so.

    But the results are stunning. Nothing else even comes close to ShiftN.
    Don't dream your life - live your dream.
    I'm using FILM because nature isn't made of squares.

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