Photoshop also lacks the easy-to-use adjustments sliders in Camera Raw to get at them, you have to open the pano in the Camera Raw filter so you may as well use Camera Raw to begin with. Photoshop doesn’t have a Boundary Warp slider either, though its Photomerge dialog does have a Content-Aware Fill option that can fix empty spots. (If you’ve got Lightroom, stitch your panos there Lightroom CC 6.4 and later includes a Boundary Warp slider, too!)Īlthough you could use Photoshop’s Photomerge command to create a pano, the end result is pixel-based. And of course, Camera Raw has all those wonderful slider-based controls for adjusting exposure, contrast, highlights, shadows, etc. Heck, in the dark old ages of 2015, you had to use Photoshop’s Content-Aware Fill command to avoid cropping. This slider drastically reduces the need to crop empty areas from the pano due to the distortion voodoo involved in aligning the images. In version 9.4, Adobe included another mission critical feature for your pano pleasure: Boundary Warp.
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