How to remove a house from a photo
-
@massimo said:
Photoshop Cs5 is quite a nice tool. A 5 sec work. Just made a rough selection then pressed canc. Obviously you can complete better the job with some additional work.
Wow!
Are you telling me that CS made the third image from the 1st image all on its own?
-
Yes! <in summary> It has to be the newest CS5. And GiMP has had it for a few years, though possibly not quite as clean as the expensive photoshop version.
And all previous versions of Photoshop had tools that let you do it manually very quickly (again, depending on the photo - some are rather time consuming to fix).
But still, that CS5 example above is very impressive! I hope some day my office decides to upgrade. I have a feeling we'll be skipping 5 altogether though
Chris
-
@unknownuser said:
Wow!
Are you telling me that CS made the third image from the 1st image all on its own?
Exactly Al, just what I said: a lasso selection and canc. That's all.
Obviously the result depends on the base image and often you need some additional work.
Here you have another example made with the "spot healing brush tool": paint on the objects you want to remove, then release the left button of the mouse...
-
Amazing tools. Maybe I should upgrade my CS4!
-
Where in GIMP?
I'm running 2.6 (just downloaded a few weeks ago).
Can't seem to find it! -
It is a plugin "gimp-resynthesizer". You can download it here: http://www.logarithmic.net/pfh/resynthesizer
-
This technique was represented in SIGGRAPH some years ago. There is also another image operator called seam carving that supports content-aware image resizing (CS4 and greater).
-
You can also remove an image in PS Elements with the "magic extractor", but I think you will have to fill the space manually with clone tool etc.
The Gimp plugin is windows only, or used to be anyway. -
The Gimp plugin supports many platforms. The easiest installation is in Linux, Windows is a bit more to do by hand and the site offers also a download for OS X:
http://www.logarithmic.net/pfh/resynthesizer/history -
Thanks, that's good to know, I'm using Gimp more and more. It does fairly good bump and normal maps as well.
-
That new CS5 "Content Aware" tool is just amazing.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NH0aEp1oDOI
This video is the most compelling use of Content Aware
Advertisement