![]() I was again able to work-around this issue by stretching both corners and assuming the amounts were the same, and then the internal Mesh Warp adjustment worked properly, but I assume I am missing something to have to do these individual adjustments. Pulling at the center of the top generated a curved extension, and did not stretch the entire top. It would pull the center, or I could pull both corners and try to make the distances the same, but surely there is some way to stretch an entire side of the image without having to stretch the corners. I went back to the initial image and tried to "pull" the entire top of the image to do the stretch, but it would not allow me to do that. To work around this issue I decided to reverse the order of adjustments and do the "stretch" first. That is, the vector point I entered to correct the internal distortion created an anchor and I could not find any way to force PL to incorporate that adjustment and allow me to proceed with the entire remaining image. Of course that worked properly, but when I next tried to stretch the entire top to compensate for the vertical fish-eye compression I ran into the issue of the original vector point, and it only allowed me adjust in relation to the vector point I had created. ![]() My first step was to correct the internal distortion by "pulling" down the interior of the image to correct some objects that appeared to be too high. I have not run into this before because I have not been using the fish-eye as it is a new lens for me. ![]() I wanted to make two adjustments - to stretch the image vertically and to use what I think of as Mesh Warp (what PhotoLine refers to as vector points) to correct some distortion in the image interior. I ran into a couple of issues with an image today when trying to fix the perspective of a fish-eye image. ![]()
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