I just got a (nearly new) 18-55 IS for my 400d and noted that my horizons seem a bit bevelled. Is it my imagination, or is it the lens (and if it is the lens then thats not good is it)?
Have a look at this: www.dxo.com/intl/photo/dxo_optics_pro
I've been playing with it recently and now purchased it as it does a very good at fixing lens pincushion/barrel distortion, vignetting, chromatic aberration, and perspective.
I run all my Wedding shots through DxO Elite now - it does a great job
Here's a funny though... I shot a Wedding last year with a mate with a 5D and 24-105L lens and my relatively cheap 18-70 Nikon had far less distortion correction than that L glass
I was talking about pincushion and the opposite (can't remember) distortion, which appears to be the cause of the curvature in the OP. It's more extreme in wide angle lenses but it's the same sort of thing?
You can download a tiny piece of software called PTLens, which will sort this for you. It's dirt cheap (well it was at $2 =£1) and does a good job. Google it.
It will identify your lens (and the focal length) automatically and apply the correction when you ask it to.
Canon users have custom distortion correction (also CA and vignetting sorted) which is lens specific, from Canon's supplied DPP software. Version 3.5 has data for every Canon lens made, free to download. Works better than anything else, and just a single mouse click. Only works with Raw though
Edit: Problem with regular distortion correction is that it's not lens specific and doesn't deal perfectly with 'moustashe' shaped distortion curves common in wide zooms.
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