More construction. It was fascinating to me, how the face of the building was gone, to reveal the rooms inside, now empty of their occupants. Otherwise, at work all day with no more time to see interesting things.
Again, another Lightroom effort, so I am pleased with that small step. I am aware that my perspective is off, but that is a Photoshop thingy and I don't have time for that today.
10/1/2020: Finished year 7 (!), with continuing gratitude towards this amazing community. Based in St. Louis, MO. Regular worker-bee and self-taught photography dilettante....
You are making LR work for you! I had to give up tonight -- couldn't even get the clone or the crop to work. Clearly I was doing some totally basic wrong. UGH!! So my escape was to come over and view/comment on 365. I love the repetitive structures in this image and think B&W was the way to go.
Beautiful in b&w! Love your comp and so awesome you can see inside! In LR you can do lens corrections to correct the perspective changes that your lens creates. Maybe that helps?
In case it helps, straightening in LR is pretty straight-forward and can be done in a couple of clicks. In Develop module, go to Lens Corrections, click "Enable Profile Corrections", "Constrain Crop" and then click the Auto button. That sequence will square up 98% of most images adequately it seems. On occasion LR will get things totally wrong trying to make the auto corrections and in that case just click the Off button and then uncheck the other two settings to revert back. For the other 2% a mix of the auto corrections or in some cases manual correction would needed.
In case it helps, straightening in LR is pretty straight-forward and can be done in a couple of clicks. In Develop module, go to Lens Corrections, click "Enable Profile Corrections", "Constrain Crop" and then click the Auto button. That sequence will square up 98% of most images adequately it seems. On occasion LR will get things totally wrong trying to make the auto corrections and in that case just click the Off button and then uncheck the other two settings to revert back. For the other 2% a mix of the auto corrections or in some cases manual correction would needed.