Not a LR person but I use DXO instead to do the perspective corrections. Especially the ability to place control points at the four corners of an object that should be a perfect rectangle. When applied, the image is distorted to move the four control points to where they should be resulting in perfectly square corners. So in the example at 3:22, the left center door would become a perfect rectangle and with the auto lens corrections from DXO, lens distortion is also removed.
@@ladyethymewhy wouldn't people be able to go to "interesting" places? It does not have to expensive. For instance the video shows New York city, the people living there won't have to pay much for travel. Same goes for the place you live, there are intersting photo locations there as well, you just need to notice them.
5/29/2024 Great tutorial, Tony, and as usual, one designed and delivered at the right pace…along with pitch-perfect reiterations and helpful emphasis in order to meet the cognitive needs of the average viewer, i.e., hobbyists, non-engineers. Thank you! One question about the Sony camera featured in an excellent old 2020 video on SD cards: Where did you find such a beautiful, leather case and strap? I recently purchased a Sony a7IV and would like to protect it from occasional dings, dents and scratches that are an unfortunate possibility even with treating this beautiful “tool” with the loving care it deserves. Hope you can help. Best, Will
Always full frame, or can you get this done with aps-c? Also, with the prices of these higher end crop sensor cameras, why is anybody choosing them over moderately older full frame, or newer full frame like the Canon R8? I just don’t understand the pricing strategy. Seems to make no sense at all.
Guys, it's not mockery but real advice: hit the gym! I did that 2 years ago, and now my 5dsr + 24-70 combo feels like "a nice little walkaround setup", while it used to be "goddamn i'm going to my crop + 18-55 for street photography" People say that tamron 15-30 is a heavy lens which is not practical, but I just smile as I walk around with mine. Muscle up, guys! Things begin to "weigh half as much" really.
In that video I explain the f/8 isn't literal; it's just saying the camera settings don't much matter. But I'm definitely going to use different apertures for different scenarios.
The Eiffel Tower’s lighting is protected by copyright, so professional use of images of the Eiffel Tower at night requires prior authorization and may be subject to a fee. Professionals should therefore contact the Eiffel Tower's management company to learn about conditions for using the images depending on the case.
@@TonyAndChelsea If you check with the management company that I have you will find its both the static lights and the light show. The above comment was from an email they sent where I deliberately cut a key bit out to see if anyone would comment, you took the bait. What the actually emailed me was "Photographing the Eiffel Tower at night is not illegal at all. Any individual can take photos and share them on social networks. But the situation is different for professionals. The Eiffel Tower’s lighting and sparkling lights are protected by copyright, so professional use of images of the Eiffel Tower at night requires prior authorization and may be subject to a fee. Professionals should therefore contact the Eiffel Tower's management company to learn about conditions for using the images depending on the case."
❓️Am i the only one who see some weird colors on this video and others of this channel when i watching it on my Android smartphone in landscape mode ?😅By the way, portrait mode is fine...
@@TonyAndChelsea what's weird is that it only does it on your channel... maybe other channels don't offer their videos in HDR .... is this really necessary? Has anyone else reported this problem to you? Just for info, my phone is a Huawei Mate 10 pro from 2018.😗
Not a LR person but I use DXO instead to do the perspective corrections. Especially the ability to place control points at the four corners of an object that should be a perfect rectangle. When applied, the image is distorted to move the four control points to where they should be resulting in perfectly square corners. So in the example at 3:22, the left center door would become a perfect rectangle and with the auto lens corrections from DXO, lens distortion is also removed.
4:52 ... Yes, that background... less skewed but more cluttered 🤔 This may be useful in some occasions but... one needs to also check that
Rule no. 7: Go and visit interesting places. It is more important than the latest and finest gear.
Rule 1
I mean....if you can afford it. But seriously who can right now?
@@ladyethymewhy wouldn't people be able to go to "interesting" places? It does not have to expensive. For instance the video shows New York city, the people living there won't have to pay much for travel. Same goes for the place you live, there are intersting photo locations there as well, you just need to notice them.
5/29/2024
Great tutorial, Tony, and as usual, one designed and delivered at the right pace…along with pitch-perfect reiterations and helpful emphasis in order to meet the cognitive needs of the average viewer, i.e., hobbyists, non-engineers. Thank you!
One question about the Sony camera featured in an excellent old 2020 video on SD cards: Where did you find such a beautiful, leather case and strap?
I recently purchased a Sony a7IV and would like to protect it from occasional dings, dents and scratches that are an unfortunate possibility even with treating this beautiful “tool” with the loving care it deserves.
Hope you can help.
Best,
Will
Great video as always. Very interesting and informative. Things I wouldn’t have thought of, so I’ve learnt stuff today.
Is it fine if I choose a gridlines mode ? A very good guidelines here. Thank you, Tony & Chelsea. Worth watching.
Yes definitely that's a great tip!
@@TonyAndChelsea Thank you. 🙏
Always full frame, or can you get this done with aps-c?
Also, with the prices of these higher end crop sensor cameras, why is anybody choosing them over moderately older full frame, or newer full frame like the Canon R8?
I just don’t understand the pricing strategy. Seems to make no sense at all.
I use Photoshop Elements for perspective correction but if I use my phone then Photoshop Express has a very simple and fast correction.
“I recommend bringing a wide range of lens” 😂😂 I have to bring a trolly with optics 📸
This should be retitled "Why You Need a Lens With Shift Capability and a Tripod to Shoot Architecture"
Are you producing videos in HDR going forward? Should we all do that? :)
Yes I think so
@@TonyAndChelsea It's terribly annoying. Please don't.
Guys, it's not mockery but real advice: hit the gym!
I did that 2 years ago, and now my 5dsr + 24-70 combo feels like "a nice little walkaround setup", while it used to be "goddamn i'm going to my crop + 18-55 for street photography"
People say that tamron 15-30 is a heavy lens which is not practical, but I just smile as I walk around with mine.
Muscle up, guys! Things begin to "weigh half as much" really.
What happened to F8 & be there? Your first shots of the doors were at F2.8, should you have not got closer to F5.8 or F8?
In that video I explain the f/8 isn't literal; it's just saying the camera settings don't much matter. But I'm definitely going to use different apertures for different scenarios.
I wish cameras had leveling for 2 axis. Not just one. Seems a very simple thing to do.
Not enough advertising, please add more.
The Eiffel Tower’s lighting is protected by copyright, so professional use of images of the Eiffel Tower at night requires prior authorization and may be subject to a fee. Professionals should therefore contact the Eiffel Tower's management company to learn about conditions for using the images depending on the case.
It's the light show, rather than the static lighting, which is protected by copyright.
@@TonyAndChelsea If you check with the management company that I have you will find its both the static lights and the light show. The above comment was from an email they sent where I deliberately cut a key bit out to see if anyone would comment, you took the bait. What the actually emailed me was "Photographing the Eiffel Tower at night is not illegal at all. Any individual can take photos and share them on social networks.
But the situation is different for professionals. The Eiffel Tower’s lighting and sparkling lights are protected by copyright, so professional use of images of the Eiffel Tower at night requires prior authorization and may be subject to a fee. Professionals should therefore contact the Eiffel Tower's management company to learn about conditions for using the images depending on the case."
whoa, nearly blinded me
Great video, great tips, thanks
Glad it was helpful!
I always though the eifel tower at night was copyright protected by the artist
It's the active light show that happens regularly, not the static lighting.
8:00 genius 🤭🤭🤭🤭
First rule. You do not talk about photography. Second rule. You do not talk about photography.
hahahahahaha
What did you just do?
This comment is soo freaking funny
Question: Did you guys get permission to shoot the doors at the dorms? Or were you okay to shoot as long as there were no people in the shot?
😮😮😮😮 U r so cool 😎
7:37 🤣🤣🤣🤣 proof app works 🤣🤣🤣🤣
Not hdr plz. Not needed. Really bad
Its FrEE REaLisTatE (photography tips)
❓️Am i the only one who see some weird colors on this video and others of this channel when i watching it on my Android smartphone in landscape mode ?😅By the way, portrait mode is fine...
Hmm must be a bug with how Android UA-cam app renders HDR
@@TonyAndChelsea what's weird is that it only does it on your channel... maybe other channels don't offer their videos in HDR .... is this really necessary? Has anyone else reported this problem to you? Just for info, my phone is a Huawei Mate 10 pro from 2018.😗
Too much promotion guys