Fisheye software?? D x O vs PTLens
/forum/topic/646967/0

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jvvjvv
Registered: Jun 09, 2003
Total Posts: 374
Country: United States

I just got a fisheye lens and I "heard" somewhere there is software to straighten out the 'curves'.......is there such an animal??

Thanks........

Jack

Edited by jvvjvv on May 16, 2008 at 06:26 PM GMT



azurevision
Registered: Dec 04, 2002
Total Posts: 437
Country: United Kingdom

Operating system? There's loads for Mac, Linux & Windows, but they mostly have different names on the different platforms.

Ian



Alex
Registered: Oct 21, 2002
Total Posts: 305
Country: United States

http://www.fredmiranda.com/A9_rico/

Alex



jvvjvv
Registered: Jun 09, 2003
Total Posts: 374
Country: United States

Using windows XP on a PC.............thanks for the link. Love this site, always helping hands : )

I will give Panorama Tools a try.

Jack



jvvjvv
Registered: Jun 09, 2003
Total Posts: 374
Country: United States

Pano tools seems more of a panorama set up??

PTLENS is $15.00 and seems to have "limitations"

DxO optics seems like a better tool, but $300.00. Anyone use any of there??

Jack



mhayes5254
Registered: Dec 06, 2004
Total Posts: 775
Country: United States

Image trends fisheye-hemi plugin for photoshop



jvvjvv
Registered: Jun 09, 2003
Total Posts: 374
Country: United States

mhayes........thanks!! Very easy to use......(actually it is idiot proof)...self loads and a truly 1 click operation. Seems to do the job just fine.

Jackl



SoundHound
Registered: Jan 14, 2006
Total Posts: 2974
Country: United States

Imagetrendsinc.com $30 for the plug in-try their demo.



Cathy Yount
Registered: Oct 01, 2007
Total Posts: 509
Country: United States

I don't know if this is what you are talking about, but I know that you can use the "Lens Correction" filter under the Distort option in the Filter menu (Photoshop CS3). Use the "remove distortion" slider to remove or add bulge from the photo.



isyukri
Registered: Apr 16, 2003
Total Posts: 111
Country: Qatar

The best I know is Rectfish. It does'nt crop the image a lot, instead it creates interpolation to fill the "straighten". Using Photoshop's Lens Correction, we will lose desirable amount of image due to crop.



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