Great to see you here. Join our insightful photographic forum today and start tapping into a huge wealth of photographic knowledge. Completing our simple registration process will allow you to gain access to exclusive content, add your own topics and posts, share your work and connect with other members through your own private inbox! And don’t forget to say hi!
Wild guess: Shift affects vignetting and lens distortion in a large and predictable manner. Tilt perhaps little or not at all. Why would C1 care about the tilt amount if there's nothing to correct? Did I mention wild guess?
What is your workflow for assigning the LCCs? Surely each one individually on the unprocessed image and with the values of the shift or is there another method?Here is another, this time taken with the GFX 50S II, non BSI sensor. Three panel stitch shot at f/11. Left and right are shifted to the max of the GF 30 T/S, which is +15mm and -15mm. Stitched in Ps.
View attachment 211577
There is quite a bit of vignetting, as seen in the LCC shot I taken at f/5.6 to highlight any vignettes, but no colour shifts. The sun was very bright, and it was super hot, about 35C at mid-morning. I underexposed to ensure the cloud highlights were within the range. I ended up preferring the non LCC corrected shot, I think the vignette serves to highlight the bright sunlight on the building.
View attachment 211578
If you're using Lightroom, as long as the LCC is in the same place (i.e., LCC then image, or image then LCC), you can select every pair and apply flat field correction in one pass.What is your workflow for assigning the LCCs? Surely each one individually on the unprocessed image and with the values of the shift or is there another method?
What is your workflow for assigning the LCCs? Surely each one individually on the unprocessed image and with the values of the shift or is there another method?
Just something to add. When I was using the Cambo WRS my pano stitching flow was to take the left/right images first then take the left/right LCC frames. This was possible because the Cambo has detents.What is your workflow for assigning the LCCs? Surely each one individually on the unprocessed image and with the values of the shift or is there another method?
Sadly Adobe does not take care about shift lens users yet. No correction profiles for the Fuji GF TS lenses. They will have to implement correction for shifted lenses which will surely need some coding work. But Capture One shows that it can be done fine if you want.I am wondering when the GFX100 II camera and TS lens profiles will be available on ACR. I don’t see them yet.
Hi Corvus,Thank you for your descriptions. In principle, I do it the same way in C1 and it usually works. Recently, however, with 3 LCC-corrected shots that initially looked harmonious next to each other, I had an inconsistency in the white balance after stitching with the panorama function, as if C1 had ignored it in the middle image (see example: https://www.getdpi.com/forum/index....fx-revised-review-published.74887/post-903963 ) Maybe it's because the symmetrical (and old Technikon 58 can't be fully corrected in some situations, because that's not the case every time.
I haven't tried that yet, because what I like about C1 so far is that I can do all tasks with it - cataloging / editing / refining / exporting...Hi Corvus,
Did you try to export the 3 images as separate TIFF files with LCC on each. And then use the corrected TIFF files with Panorama function in Photoshop after?
If you are trying to apply LCC and Panorama at the same time in C1, possibly it is getting confused.
Best,
John