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Post by peterob on May 24, 2024 6:33:17 GMT
In another forum there has been discussion of the new Adobe releases this month. In particular they have added an early version of the AI generative fill object removal to Lightroom. Auto-update hadn't kicked in on my computer so I didn't understand the thread at first but now I have forced a Lightroom update and it seems to work quite well, though it is a different technique to the traditional "heal" function in the clone tool. Here is one thing I couldn't really fix - it is a crop to the problem - an oil stain on cobbles - which rather catches the eye. I had not really managed to fix it before. The differences in size and colour and orientation of the cobbles makes it almost impossible in Lightroom to choose a replacement target to use with the heal or clone brush. I expect photoshop allows more to be done but I'm not an expert. Here an almost one click solution. Before DSCF0775.jpg by Pete, on Flickr After DSCF0775-2.jpg by Pete, on Flickr
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Post by Fenris on May 24, 2024 9:02:52 GMT
Impressive. Just installing the update as I type.
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Post by peterob on May 24, 2024 9:16:54 GMT
Impressive. Just installing the update as I type. There is a video by Julianne Kost that is worth watching. First time I used the AI remove I was appalled. If you closely select the object to be removed (as for heal) it will likely substitute another object of similar shape and colour. I was trying to remove a paper tissue and it turned it into a dead fish! Include the surrounding background and it seems to work as expected. It does provide some options to the replacement. Cycle through these to get the most pleasing solution. There is a little arrow in the control panel. I wouldn't have figured that out without seeing the video. It isn't instant - takes a few seconds on my mac studio which is a quick machine.
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Post by spinno on May 24, 2024 10:56:09 GMT
Paper tissue turning into a dead fish...surely that's an extract from one of Kath's dreams...
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Post by gezza on May 24, 2024 12:17:26 GMT
In another forum there has been discussion of the new Adobe releases this month. In particular they have added an early version of the AI generative fill object removal to Lightroom. Auto-update hadn't kicked in on my computer so I didn't understand the thread at first but now I have forced a Lightroom update and it seems to work quite well, though it is a different technique to the traditional "heal" function in the clone tool. Here is one thing I couldn't really fix - it is a crop to the problem - an oil stain on cobbles - which rather catches the eye. I had not really managed to fix it before. The differences in size and colour and orientation of the cobbles makes it almost impossible in Lightroom to choose a replacement target to use with the heal or clone brush. I expect photoshop allows more to be done but I'm not an expert. Have you tried generative expand? Sorry about the size... you'll have to click on it.
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Post by peterob on May 24, 2024 13:36:16 GMT
In another forum there has been discussion of the new Adobe releases this month. In particular they have added an early version of the AI generative fill object removal to Lightroom. Auto-update hadn't kicked in on my computer so I didn't understand the thread at first but now I have forced a Lightroom update and it seems to work quite well, though it is a different technique to the traditional "heal" function in the clone tool. Here is one thing I couldn't really fix - it is a crop to the problem - an oil stain on cobbles - which rather catches the eye. I had not really managed to fix it before. The differences in size and colour and orientation of the cobbles makes it almost impossible in Lightroom to choose a replacement target to use with the heal or clone brush. I expect photoshop allows more to be done but I'm not an expert. Have you tried generative expand? Sorry about the size... you'll have to click on it. View AttachmentI haven't got that far - is that a replacement for super-resolution (or whatever they called it) ?
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Post by gezza on May 24, 2024 13:48:05 GMT
Use the crop tool and bring it out to wherever you want, right click and then check generative expand, don't put anything in the box and click generate. 👍
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Post by Fenris on May 24, 2024 15:25:05 GMT
Had a play around with it, seems to do nearly the same as the Photoshop AI. Might be handy in a few occasions when I want to remove a dead fish
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Post by peterob on May 24, 2024 16:40:00 GMT
Use the crop tool and bring it out to wherever you want, right click and then check generative expand, don't put anything in the box and click generate. 👍 I understand now - like when making panoramas from a stitch of hand-held shots there is an option to crop to what is covered or expand to fill in missing bits. I always crop - the fill in hasn't been much good in the past.
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Post by gezza on May 24, 2024 18:10:29 GMT
Had a play around with it, seems to do nearly the same as the Photoshop AI. Might be handy in a few occasions when I want to remove a dead fish or add one.
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