"Distraction" Removal Strasbourg France |
My intention in this article is to discuss the marvelous new Photoshop tool, Generative Fill, but first I feel I need to explain and apologize for my prolonged absence (until a week ago) from publications in this blog.
I am a little surprised and a lot ashamed that it has
been just over two years since my last post to my digital photography blog. I
understand some, but not all, of the reasons for my absence. I have
always said that I do the blog primarily for my own fulfillment, a way to force
myself to consider the challenges of digital photography in a more formal
way. I hope that my discussions have been helpful to others,
although I must observe that my ghosting has not led to an uproar of
disappointment from my “fans”.
The reasons for my absence are many. Certainly, I must blame, as everyone does, the pandemic, although you might expect that all that free time should have led to more output. Over the years I always did my best writing while settled at a table in my favorite coffee house and it just hasn’t been the same staring at the monitor isolated in my studio. The good news is that I started this blog back at a table in the expanded Brewbakers. I did expect that my retirement would have led to more free time to devote to writing but there have been various competing priorities.
Courthouse Butte Sedona Arizona |
Enough excuses. In the last two years the
light has not changed and the beauty of New England remains
remarkable. What has changed are the tools that we have available to
capture that beauty. Successive updates to Adobe Lightroom have made
it a more capable image editing tool while retaining its file management and
organizational strengths. It is possible to rely solely on Lightroom
for your image management and processing, but Photoshop still is the gold
standard and offers image editing capabilities that are still not present in
Lightroom. AI supported Generative Fill (GF) is one these powerful
capabilities.
Marshall Point Light |
Added Gulls & Lobster Boat |
Generative Fill (GF) is not a perfect tool, but in many situations, it is almost magical. Much of the attention given to Generative Fill is based on its ability to insert content into images. By selecting a portion of an image GF can add almost anything that you may ask. In my sunset picture of Marshal Point Light, I selected an area in the right upper sky and asked for three seagulls at sunset. Each time you press the “Generate Button”, after a short period of “thinking”, the tool provides three choices. In this case one of the initial choices worked reasonably well. Of course, I couldn’t stop there and added a lobster boat on the left. GF gets these images from Adobe’s extensive image library, and it often works quite well. Of course, there is no roadblock to keep you from going too far.
Adde Elephant |
Distraction Removal
Peggy's Cove Light Nova Scotia Why Do They Watch Beside the Light |
People Removed the Old Fashion Way |
In the past I would use cloning to carefully remove a few of the most intrusive humans and other distractions, always balancing the severity of the distraction against the time required to meticulously scrub away the contamination. Often the decision was based on the complexity of the background that must be duplicated to fill in the space opened by the removal. In images that I found especially powerful, like the Peggy's Cove Light above, the time required for removal of distractions was more justified and I could spend hours cleaning things up to let the image shine through.
Crowded Old Town Strasbourg |
Generative Fill has made this process much easier, reducing to a fraction the time required to clean up even the most cluttered image.
Partial Crowd Selection |
Generative Fill of Selection |
Further Removal of Distractions |
Cologne Cathedral |
Sometimes GF seems to have problems getting things right. GF can dip into the Adobe Image Database to pull up crazy stuff to fill the gaps. You don’t want a poster board filled with gibberish replacing the person in front of the cathedral altar. In these situations, redrawing the selection may help.
Crowded Bridge Strasbourg |
Bridge is Clear |
Spalen Gate Basel Switzerland |
Also, check out my Gallery of images from Amsterdam and the Rhine
www.partridgebrookreflections.com