Why do I... Using a Wide Angle Lens

chouglez

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IMG_3080.jpg


Why do the piccies look slanted when I click them with a wide angle such as a Sigma 10-20mm as the one shown above............. :thinking:
 
Its just lens distortion. Can be quite creative at times, other times it can be just anoying. The wider the lens, the more distortion :)
 
So it seems normal. I thought there was something wrong with my lens....... :gag:

Any more suggestions................:thinking:
 
There is a small article in this month's Digital Camera (september) on this kind of problem reffered to as Barrel Distortion, the help mentioned is very basic like use PS' lens correcting tool, surely if you google Barrel Distortion you'll get some tutorials how to correct.
 
I'm sure you would - but this isn't Barrel distortion, so I'm not sure that'd be much help

:D

DD

wow well done dd you managed to straighten the leaning tower the,ve been trying for years maybe they should have just called you he he:clap:
 
wow well done dd you managed to straighten the leaning tower the,ve been trying for years maybe they should have just called you he he:clap:

One of Photoshop's transform tools is called...

"Injecting tonnes of concrete under a falling building to a) stop it falling further, or b) straighten it back up"

- so I just used that to effectively pump about 90 tonnes of the hard stuff under the left hand side and Hey Presto

:D

DD
 
Basically you have to think about the lens and what its doing... its pulling into shot a far wider angle than its front element/lens length should really allow for, down a circular tube and onto a square sensor. Add into that that you are stood at the foot of the building [LToP aside] and will naturally get converging parallels and lean in your own view, never mind a lens thats having to distort that to fit it all in.


Alternatively, you can use photoshop to add 20 tonnes of cement underneath :D


heres a quick & dirty edit done with PT lens - a tip, always try and get that bit further away so you have room to correct any distortion without actually loosing part of the building you were trying to photograph ;)

IMG_3080edit.jpg
 
Get further away, and/or climb UP something. Find a first floor window, or a car roof (not yours), or that ladder you strap to your backpack. :naughty: But with extreme wide-angles it would be difficult.

PTLens is a little piece of software that can sort this sort of thing, as mentioned above...
 
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