From the course: Shooting and Processing Panoramas
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Using Photoshop filters to enhance panoramas
From the course: Shooting and Processing Panoramas
Using Photoshop filters to enhance panoramas
- Once you have a merged panoramic photo, you can always turn to other features inside of Adobe Photoshop to enhance it. There's often a few filters that I find useful, and I just want to show you a couple of them to jumpstart some ideas. Let's open up an image here for some filters. Now, to make this a little bit easier, I'll switch to the standard essentials workspace. What I want to do before adding any filters, however, is, with the layer selected, choose filter, convert for smart filters. applied are going to be editable. Now, I want to enhance this image a bit. We'll stick with built-in filters for now, but later we'll talk about some third-party filters. To start, let's take a look at some of our choices. First up, you'll see many different options available. One of the ones that I like to apply, and it may sound a bit strange, is a gaussian blur. What I'll do is bloom this out pretty heavily, get a nice soft image, then double-click here on the blending arrow, this allows you…
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(Locked)
Initiating the Photomerge command from Bridge1m 11s
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Initiating the Photomerge command from Photoshop1m 21s
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Choosing an alignment method1m 33s
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Compensating for lens distortion5m 4s
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Blending the photos3m 24s
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Post merge cleanup3m 8s
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Using the Adaptive Wide Angle filter to remove distortion2m 59s
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Merging a 360-degree panoramic photo7m 19s
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Cleaning up VR images in Photoshop3m 23s
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Merging the GigaPan panoramic photo6m 27s
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Using Photoshop filters to enhance panoramas5m 32s
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