![]() More complex panoramas require several tries before the stitching is done properly, or manual correction. ![]() However, we all understand that, more often than not and especially with Brenizer method panoramas that I love so much, the stitching process is far from being perfectly accurate every time. ![]() I chose this image for the sake of convenience – I didn’t want it to cause any apparent problems while I tried to explain how to seamlessly include Photoshop or any other panorama merging software in your Lightroom workflow. The image did not have a main object of interest and only a few points that needed critical precision during stitching process. In the article, I used a very simple and straightforward panorama image which could be merged without any errors virtually on first try. This is a follow-up article to the tutorial I published a few days ago on how to create a panorama image in Lightroom.
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