Editing 360 Degree Photos in Photoshop & After Effects
Chris Converse
Lessons
Class Introduction
01:43 2Software You'll Need
00:36 3A Brief Intro To After Effects
01:54 4Class Materials
00:56 5Isolating The Tripod Area
07:17 6Seamless Tripod Removal
02:04 7Replacing Tripod From Bottom Of Sphere
03:37 8Retouch And Reset The Panorama Center Point
03:39Class Description
AFTER THIS CLASS YOU’LL BE ABLE TO:
- Get a brief introduction to After Effects (from a Photoshop perspective)
- Work non-destructively with linked layered Photoshop files
- Seamlessly remove elements from a 360º photo
- Create adjustments without causing a ‘seam’ in the final composite
- Introduce 2D artwork (including logos) without distortion
- Add special effects including a sunrise and sky replacement
ABOUT CHRIS' CLASS:
As 360º photos continue to grow in popularity, especially in social media and hospitality industries, the next logical step is to begin editing and enhancing these images just as you do with traditional photography. The challenge is, however, that these are not flat images. As images are “unwrapped” in photo editing tools, we need to use alternate workflows for editing and compositing these types of photos.
This course will show you a step-by-step, non-destructive process, for masking out your tripod, applying 2-dimensional artwork, retouching, and color adjustments, as well as adding special effects to your image.
WHO THIS CLASS IS FOR:
- Photographers
- Graphic Designers
- Web Designers
- Interaction Designers
- VR Designers
SOFTWARE USED:
Adobe Photoshop CC 2021
Adobe After Effects CC 2021
Ricoh Theta App (optional):
FREE Basic App for Mac or Windows
ABOUT YOUR INSTRUCTOR:
Chris has over 25 years of experience in graphic design, interactive and animated media, with a unique focus on both design and development. Chris possesses development skills across such languages as PHP, HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and MySQL, making his design execution optimal across various media, screen sizes, and device capabilities. In addition to design and development, Chris has been a featured speaker in over 225 industry-related events and conferences, including the NAB, Adobe MAX, How Design Live, AIGA, CreativePro Week, and Adobe Video World.
Class Materials
Ratings and Reviews
Rex Maximilian
In Lesson 8 I would highly recommend grouping the layers into a folder named "Components," then duplicate it and turn the duplicate into a smart layer. Then rename the smart layer "Composite," or something like that. Then turn off the group of layers leaving only the composite layer displayed. This way the files remains editable for future lawn/image cleaning. The way the instructor did it would delete all of the layers for potential future editing.