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Dxo Viewpoint

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DxO ViewPoint 3 is the latest perspective correction software from DxO Labs. This is a a highly specialized image processing tool which is designed to correct distortion causes by perspective and optical distortion. Being designed to perform a number of loosely related image manipulation, it provides a minimalist user-interface which can show. DxO ViewPoint DxO can fix distorted faces at the side of your wide-angle photos like no other software. Michael Muchmore. 14 Jun 2018, 1:08 a.m. A geometrical correction tool. DxO ViewPoint is a highly-specialized software whose role is to correct geometrical problems in images: Distortion: An optical flaw that can be more or less obvious as either barrel or pincushion form, depending on the type and model of the lens used to shoot. NIK COLLECTION 3 BY DxO EISA PHOTO SOFTWARE 2020-2021 'Nik Collection 3 by DxO is a suite of eight powerful photo-editing plug-ins for Adobe Photoshop, Lightroom and DxO PhotoLab, that helps photographers take their images to the next level. DxO told us the name has a double meaning reflecting the changes the software can make to an image. The first meaning of ViewPoint is the meaning of a photo. The second meaning is the photographer.

Verdict: 4 stars

Dxo viewpoint

DxO ViewPoint 3 is a very effective and useful add-on for DxO PhotoLab but perhaps less useful these days as a plug-in for Lightroom and Photoshop, given that these have pretty good perspective correction tools of their own. ViewPoint also faces competition from the new and very similar Perspective Efex plug in that's part of the DxO Nik Collection 3.

DxO ViewPoint 3 is the latest version of DxO's perspective and distortion correction program. It works as a standalone application, as a plug-in for Lightroom, Photoshop and Elements and as a fully-integrated panel within DxO PhotoLab, DxO's flagship optical correction and raw processing tool.

ViewPoint is designed to correct the converging verticals and other exaggerated perspective effects you get with wideangle lenses – DxO Optics Pro only corrects lens aberrations like distortion, chromatic aberration, corner shading (vignetting) and edge softness.

ViewPoint serves a very useful function, then, but it's not unique. Lightroom has its own perspective correction tools, as does Photoshop. What it needs to bring, then, is either an easier workflow, better results or features the others don't have.

Some of the new features in version 3 might help. These include new, automatic perspective corrections (Lightroom already has these, so there's an element of catch-up here), automatic horizon straightening and a new creative blur (bokeh) tool for creating tilt-shift effects or defocused backgrounds.

ViewPoint already does something else that the others don't – volumetric distortion correction. You know where you have a person or an object near the edge of the frame that's distorted into too wide a shape? It fixes that, which is a pretty useful thing to be able to do with group shots, for example, or off-centre composition.

How does ViewPoint 3 work?

It sounds a complex job, but ViewPoint 3 makes perspective corrections pretty easy. Whether you're launching it as a standalone app or as a plug-in, it opens with your selected image in the main window and a vertical tools panel on the right hand side.

Dxo Viewpoint Software

Starting from the top, the first panel is for fixing Distortion. ViewPoint will identify the camera and lens combination from the image's embedded EXIF (shooting) data and automatically apply the matching lens correction profile. If it doesn't have it, it will prompt you to download it from the DxO website – it's a quick and simple process.

That's the theory, anyway. From time to time, ViewPoint may prompt you to locate the original image if you're running it as a plug-in, presumably because the image version sent to ViewPoint doesn't contain the necessary EXIF data. That seems quite odd, and it's even odder that you have to manually locate the image using a Finder/Explorer window – you would have thought that the software would have had the brains to look in the same folder as the original.

Worse, you will get this message with any Fujifilm image, and that's because DxO doesn't support Fujifilm cameras and lenses in DxO Optics Pro (due the unique pixel layout of the X-Trans sensor), and presumably this carries through into ViewPoint. It would be better if it simply told you up front when cameras/lenses weren't supported instead of sending you off on some EXIF/file hunting wild goose chase.

The distortion correction isn't essential. You can move straight to the second panel, for fixing Volume Deformation. This is really useful where you've got people or other distorted objects near the edge of the frame, but if the distortion isn't obvious it's best to leave it because the Horizontal/Vertical deformation option loses a little image area at the edges of the frame and the Diagonal correction introduces some pretty strong barrel distortion.

The Perspective panel is where it starts to get more interesting. New in Viewpoint 3 is the ability to correct perspective automatically, fixing horizontal perspective, vertical perspective or both at the same time. It doesn't always work well, especially if you try to fix both at once (generally vertical perspective correction is the most important), and if the perspective distortion is too strong or there are not suitable straight edges for the software to work from, but it works well enough, often enough, to be very useful. And if you do need to make some tweaks, you still have a full set of manual adjustments for forced horizontals or verticals, rectangles or more complex 8-point adjustments.

What's good is that as you drag the manual correction nodes, ViewPoint displays a magnifying loupe over the cursor for more accurate positioning – and what's even better is that if you hold down the shift key, the cursor movement becomes much more precise.

ViewPoint's perspective corrections are easy to apply and effective – more so than Lightroom's, probably – and while Capture One is very good for manual corrections, it can't yet do them automatically.

Next up is the Horizon panel. This does what you'd expect, with a new automatic horizontal adjustment (if there is a suitable horizon line for the software to work from) with manual horizontal and vertical adjustments.

Dxo viewpoint 3 crack

DxO ViewPoint 3 is a very effective and useful add-on for DxO PhotoLab but perhaps less useful these days as a plug-in for Lightroom and Photoshop, given that these have pretty good perspective correction tools of their own. ViewPoint also faces competition from the new and very similar Perspective Efex plug in that's part of the DxO Nik Collection 3.

DxO ViewPoint 3 is the latest version of DxO's perspective and distortion correction program. It works as a standalone application, as a plug-in for Lightroom, Photoshop and Elements and as a fully-integrated panel within DxO PhotoLab, DxO's flagship optical correction and raw processing tool.

ViewPoint is designed to correct the converging verticals and other exaggerated perspective effects you get with wideangle lenses – DxO Optics Pro only corrects lens aberrations like distortion, chromatic aberration, corner shading (vignetting) and edge softness.

ViewPoint serves a very useful function, then, but it's not unique. Lightroom has its own perspective correction tools, as does Photoshop. What it needs to bring, then, is either an easier workflow, better results or features the others don't have.

Some of the new features in version 3 might help. These include new, automatic perspective corrections (Lightroom already has these, so there's an element of catch-up here), automatic horizon straightening and a new creative blur (bokeh) tool for creating tilt-shift effects or defocused backgrounds.

ViewPoint already does something else that the others don't – volumetric distortion correction. You know where you have a person or an object near the edge of the frame that's distorted into too wide a shape? It fixes that, which is a pretty useful thing to be able to do with group shots, for example, or off-centre composition.

How does ViewPoint 3 work?

It sounds a complex job, but ViewPoint 3 makes perspective corrections pretty easy. Whether you're launching it as a standalone app or as a plug-in, it opens with your selected image in the main window and a vertical tools panel on the right hand side.

Dxo Viewpoint Software

Starting from the top, the first panel is for fixing Distortion. ViewPoint will identify the camera and lens combination from the image's embedded EXIF (shooting) data and automatically apply the matching lens correction profile. If it doesn't have it, it will prompt you to download it from the DxO website – it's a quick and simple process.

That's the theory, anyway. From time to time, ViewPoint may prompt you to locate the original image if you're running it as a plug-in, presumably because the image version sent to ViewPoint doesn't contain the necessary EXIF data. That seems quite odd, and it's even odder that you have to manually locate the image using a Finder/Explorer window – you would have thought that the software would have had the brains to look in the same folder as the original.

Worse, you will get this message with any Fujifilm image, and that's because DxO doesn't support Fujifilm cameras and lenses in DxO Optics Pro (due the unique pixel layout of the X-Trans sensor), and presumably this carries through into ViewPoint. It would be better if it simply told you up front when cameras/lenses weren't supported instead of sending you off on some EXIF/file hunting wild goose chase.

The distortion correction isn't essential. You can move straight to the second panel, for fixing Volume Deformation. This is really useful where you've got people or other distorted objects near the edge of the frame, but if the distortion isn't obvious it's best to leave it because the Horizontal/Vertical deformation option loses a little image area at the edges of the frame and the Diagonal correction introduces some pretty strong barrel distortion.

The Perspective panel is where it starts to get more interesting. New in Viewpoint 3 is the ability to correct perspective automatically, fixing horizontal perspective, vertical perspective or both at the same time. It doesn't always work well, especially if you try to fix both at once (generally vertical perspective correction is the most important), and if the perspective distortion is too strong or there are not suitable straight edges for the software to work from, but it works well enough, often enough, to be very useful. And if you do need to make some tweaks, you still have a full set of manual adjustments for forced horizontals or verticals, rectangles or more complex 8-point adjustments.

What's good is that as you drag the manual correction nodes, ViewPoint displays a magnifying loupe over the cursor for more accurate positioning – and what's even better is that if you hold down the shift key, the cursor movement becomes much more precise.

ViewPoint's perspective corrections are easy to apply and effective – more so than Lightroom's, probably – and while Capture One is very good for manual corrections, it can't yet do them automatically.

Next up is the Horizon panel. This does what you'd expect, with a new automatic horizontal adjustment (if there is a suitable horizon line for the software to work from) with manual horizontal and vertical adjustments.

The Crop panel shows you the full image area after ViewPoint has made its corrections. It will automatically crop off wedge-shaped edges while preserving the photo's original aspect ratio, so now's your chance to change the area that's been retained or its proportions.

Last but by no means least is the new Miniature effect panel. This produces the faux tilt-shift blur you see in so many other programs, with a horizontal in-focus zone and progressively defocused top and bottom areas. You can change the blur amount, the width of the sharp area and the sharpness fall-off, just as you'd expect. There is a twist, though – rather literally. You can rotate the defocused zones relative to each other to create independent planes of focus. Well, sort of. It takes a step further than other tilt-shift effects, but these are rarely particularly convincing and seems strange to get a tool like this in a program designed for optical precision rather than an analog emulation tool like DxO FilmPack.

Should you buy it?

DxO ViewPoint 3 isn't expensive, but it does a job that's already handled pretty well by most of the host applications you might launch it from. It probably makes a bit more sense when bought alongside DxO Optics Pro, where it gets its own panel within the main interface – though, paradoxically, this is offers just a simpler sub-set of its tools, notably the Perspective and Volume deformation options, presumably because its other tools are already offered elsewhere in the DxO Photo Suite product.

It's also going to be a big disappointment to owners of Fujifilm cameras. Adobe and Phase One can work with Fujifilm raw files readily enough, so it's not clear why DxO closes the door so firmly.

DxO Optics Pro is a great image correction/raw conversion tool, it's great that DxO ViewPoint integrates with it so well and if you get the DxO Photo Suite you get both programs and DxO FilmPack too.

But if you use Lightroom, Photoshop or Capture One, it doesn't make quite so much sense. You may prefer its perspective correction tools to those you've already got, and you may find it nicer to use generally, but really it's offering alternative corrections to those you already have, not plugging a major gap.

If you intend using it as a standalone program, be aware that ViewPoint works with JPEG and TIFF files but not raw. If you shoot in raw, you'll have to use it with a host program that can open your raw files. That's a bit annoying when other programs like Skylum Luminar can work with raw files directly.

DxO ViewPoint Crack [Full]

Dxo Lens Database

DxO ViewPoint

A program for correcting distorted elements that may form at the edges of your photos, it is also able to correct keystone distortion (geometric distortion of the image caused by the non-perpendicularity of the projection axis relative to the plane of the screen. It is usually characterized by a wide upper and narrowed lower edge.), You can download DxO ViewPoint Full below.

The program can easily restore the natural proportions of objects in your pictures. I would like to separately note the convenient interface. After launch, you can select several test shots to check the product capabilities on them.

DxO ViewPoint Key does not have a huge number of tools, but it does not need it, it clearly performs the tasks assigned to it. I wish you all a successful work!

Features:

Fix skewed perspectives
Manually use anchor points or the software's automatic feature to correct skewed perspectives in wide-angle photos, from the simplest to the most complex.

Restore proportions
For natural-looking shapes, automatically correct the volume deformation of faces, bodies, and objects at the edges photos taken with a wide-angle lens.

Neutralize distortion
With DxO's Optics Module database, the only one of its kind in the world, DxO ViewPoint can correct any type of distortion, including barrel, pincushion, and even fisheye effects.

Straighten the horizon
Rebalance landscape photos by automatically straightening a slanted horizon line.

Fix skewed perspectives
Are you an urban explorer? Do you enjoy photographing buildings and monuments, but are frustrated by the distorted vertical and horizontal lines in your images when you use a wide-angle lens? With DxO ViewPoint, you can manually or automatically fix skewed perspectives and automatically crop the image while maximizing the visible field.

Correct volume deformation
Along the edges of photos taken with a wide-angle lens, bodies are stretched out and faces lengthened due to the phenomenon of 'volume deformation.' With just one click, DxO ViewPoint identifies the deformation and restores the subject to its natural shape. This exclusive DxO feature, especially useful for group and portrait photos, perfectly addresses this type of distortion. You can also make changes manually with the advanced controls: regulate the intensity of the correction and select the visible field in your image to create perfectly composed photos.

No curve is too complex
DxO ViewPoint uses a sophisticated tool to correct the various types of distortion created by your lenses. Whether barrel, pincushion, or fisheye distortion, no unwanted curve in your image will go uncorrected, after which you can easily apply the perspective tools.

Renowned expertise
Designed in our laboratories using an exclusive calibration process, DxO Optics Modules contain an extensive amount of data about the exact characteristics of each lens and camera body, providing you with corrections that are perfectly suited to your equipment.

Add artistic blur
DxO's sophisticated processing engine allows you to flawlessly reproduce the progressive quality of a blur and even replicate bokeh shapes. Simulate the effects created by reducing the depth of field in an image, which normally requires using an expensive tilt-shift lens. Images retain their relief—especially when it comes to highlights.

Straighten the horizon
Rebalance your landscape photographs by automatically leveling a slanted horizon line.

Auto crop
Keep your photos full-framed no matter what corrections you apply. Whether you're correcting perspective, straightening the horizon, or changing the point of view, the automatic crop feature will optimize the visible field. You can also manually customize the way you crop the image.

An elegant and intuitive interface
The DxO ViewPoint interface features a minimalistic design, intuitive comparison tools, clearly-displayed perspective and horizon correction lines, and easily-identifiable settings that let you switch from one tool to another in an instant. The Loupe tool gives you incredibly precise control over the horizon and perspective controls, allowing you to fine-tune the corrections you apply to your photos.

Dxo Viewpoint 2 Vs 3

There's a version to fit your needs
DxO ViewPoint can be used as a standalone application or as a plugin for DxO PhotoLab. It can also be used as an external editor with Adobe® Photoshop®, Adobe® Lightroom and Adobe® Photoshop Elements®.

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Dxo Viewpoint 3 Manual Pdf

Screenshots:

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DxO ViewPoint 3.1.16 Build 289 – (82 Mb)





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