As I said to Moose, in other words perhaps, is that I don't look at the
iPhone or its photos the same way I look at photos from more traditional
cameras. It's its own little beastie. (Language Police please note
consecutive use of It's/its.)
Lightroom now includes distortion correction for the iPhone 6. I like to
process my phone shots in the phone, so I'm still checking on ways to
eliminate distortion, or at least the distortion I can see.
--Bob Whitmire
Certified Neanderthal
On Thu, Dec 3, 2015 at 10:44 AM, Jim Nichols <jhnichols@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
> If I may join this thread, I'd like to make a couple of observations.
> First, I don't ever pass on an iPhone image straight from the phone. I run
> them through my photo software, cull the bad ones, and select what I want
> to send to someone.
>
> Secondly, I have noticed that iPhone images, perhaps because I try not to
> be seen taking them, often have some distortion. I find that I do best
> when I remove the distortion before doing anything else with the image.
> And I have learned that distortion adjustments to square up windows or
> doorframes can wreak havoc with faces, so this can be a limiting factor.
>
> But, having an iPhone in one's pocket can be very handy when, for one
> reason or another, the real camera remains in the car.
>
--
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