![]() ![]() Our Olympus E-P7 bakes lens corrections into its raw files and JPEGs, as do most mirrorless cameras, but ViewPoint 4 doesn’t seem to know this and will apply its own correction profiles on top if you ask it to (if you don’t know any better, say). ![]() You may also end up applying corrections twice. ![]() It doesn't like images that have been edited in any way, it doesn't seem to spot that many mirrorless cameras embed corrections already, and if you're using it with a host program, then corrections will quite probably have been applied already. The Distortion panel seems borderline redundant. If you launch it as a standalone program, you’ll also get a directory tree of all your folders in the left sidebar. Miniature effect: this seems like a bit of a departure for an optical correction tool, but it mimics the shallow depth of field effect of a tilt lens.Īnd that’s pretty much all there is to ViewPoint 4. Horizon: an automatic or manual tool for levelling up horizons.Ĭrop: you can apply different aspect ratios and rotate images to straighten them here, too. Reshape: a new feature in ViewPoint 4 which is like a local warping tool for correcting the perspective rendering of smaller objects within a scene. ![]() Perspective: automatic correction for vertical convergence, horizontal convergence or both, plus manual tools which include powerful 8-point adjustment. Volume Deformation: a tool you won’t find anywhere else for correcting the artificial elongation of objects near the edges of the frame in photos shot with ultra-wide lenses. Distortion: for applying automatic lens correction profiles, which can be downloaded as necessary. ![]()
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