When you shoot with a camera, you're going to have lens distortion and every lens distorts differently. The combination of lens and camera could be a really complex relationship. In this video, author Richard Harrington demonstrates how Adobe actually tra
- [Instructor] When you shoot with a camera,…you're going to have lens distortion.…And every time you change that lens on the camera,…it's going to distort differently.…That's because lenses are not human eyes.…And what'll happen,…is that you'll see bending or pin cushioning.…You also might see unwanted vignetting at the edges…or chromatic aberration.…The combination of lens and camera could be a…really complex relationship.…But fortunately, Adobe actually tracks these and provides…automated tools to fix some of the most common problems.…
Let's go back to this set of images we worked with before.…And I'm going to choose to open those back up in Camera Raw.…If you take a look at this image,…you'll see that there's a couple things we can fix.…For example, you just learned about the spot removal tool,…and there's a few spots.…So let's very quickly deal with a couple of the spots here…on the lens.…There we go.…But ideally, these would be minimized when shooting.…It was a particularly windy and dusty day,…but that really helped.…
Author
Released
8/15/2017- What is time-lapse photography?
- Choosing a frame size and frame rate
- Using an internal or external intervalometer
- Selecting a memory card
- Shooting in JPEG, RAW, or MOV formats
- Tracking the sun's position
- Deciding how long to shoot
- Using a slider
- Shooting time lapse on a smartphone or tablet
- Removing noise and spots with Camera Raw
- Refining the duration and frame rate with Photoshop
- Blending frames in After Effects
- Creating variable speed effects in Premiere Pro
- Exporting your sequence from Final Cut Pro
Skill Level Intermediate
Duration
Views
Related Courses
-
Time-Lapse Video: Shooting From a Window
with Richard Harrington2h 11m Intermediate
-
Introduction
-
Welcome30s
-
Using the exercise files2m 10s
-
-
1. What Is Time-Lapse Photography?
-
The end product1m 9s
-
-
2. Technical Essentials
-
3. Equipment: What You'll Need and What You Might Want
-
Weather gear1m 6s
-
Memory card selection2m 8s
-
4. Choosing a Shooting Format
-
5. A Better Timeline Panel
-
How long should you shoot?1m 10s
-
Tracking the sun's position2m 50s
-
Working the scene2m 48s
-
6. The Exposure Triangle in Depth
-
7. Using a Slider
-
Why shoot an HDR panorama?2m 37s
-
Setting up for the shot3m 43s
-
Shooting the source images3m 27s
-
-
8. Shooting Time-Lapse Video on a Smartphone or Tablet
-
Stabilizing the phone2m 52s
-
Using Lapse It1m 26s
-
Using iStopMotion for iPad2m 18s
-
-
9. Managing Data from a Time-Lapse Shoot
-
Using a card wallet3m 9s
-
Choosing a working drive3m 18s
-
Transferring data5m 41s
-
-
10. Organizing the Images for Post
-
Using stacks in Adobe Bridge3m 54s
-
-
11. Developing the Images for Post
-
12. Assembling a Time-Lapse Movie with Adobe Photoshop
-
13. Assembling a Time-lapse Movie with Adobe After Effects
-
14. Assembling a Time-Lapse Movie with Adobe Premiere Pro
-
15. Assembling a Time-Lapse Movie with Apple Final Cut Pro X
-
Conclusion
-
Goodbye1m 4s
-
- Mark as unwatched
- Mark all as unwatched
Are you sure you want to mark all the videos in this course as unwatched?
This will not affect your course history, your reports, or your certificates of completion for this course.
CancelTake notes with your new membership!
Type in the entry box, then click Enter to save your note.
1:30Press on any video thumbnail to jump immediately to the timecode shown.
Notes are saved with you account but can also be exported as plain text, MS Word, PDF, Google Doc, or Evernote.
Share this video
Embed this video
Video: Compensating for lens distortion of a time-lapse sequence