I was looking at getting an AD400pro to upgrade from my little speedlite, but the reviews on the Godox battery were very negative. Have you had to replace your batteries?
I've got an image with a dresser in a front living room that the agent now wants removed. I'm shooting at an angle and the dresser cuts off the bottom half of a window, plus there is only a small part of the hardwood floor in the kitchen. I can't figure out how to get the bottom of the window.
And for good reasons: First, this video is on the remove tool, hence the title. Second, Photoshop's generative AI fill is still in Beta and it is not available for commercial work, so we can't use it for clients. Third, generative AI fill will very likely come with restrictions and licensing, something I covered in an earlier video at th-cam.com/video/K_5NtV3MIpY/w-d-xo.html Fourthly, I have a video on generative fill at th-cam.com/video/G0zg6kI8yUs/w-d-xo.html And lastly, generative AI fill is not as controllable as other edit/remove methods (something also discussed in those other videos), so, as I mentioned in this video, it's good to know not just the AI tools, but also the traditional ones as well. If we rely on generative AI then it would make most editing jobs overly complicated with hit-and-miss results that would be mostly out of our control. But the remove tool provides a somewhat more controllable result.
I was looking at getting an AD400pro to upgrade from my little speedlite, but the reviews on the Godox battery were very negative. Have you had to replace your batteries?
Never had a problem with the AD400Pro, never heard of a battery problem either. See amzn.to/3PEFCoG
@@NathanCoolPhoto okay great thank you. The reviews on the battery itself on B&H are quite negative so it worried me a little
Hey Nathan! Do you recommend any good flashes that are compatible with the Panasonic Lumix s5ii. I can’t seem to find any :/
I've got an image with a dresser in a front living room that the agent now wants removed. I'm shooting at an angle and the dresser cuts off the bottom half of a window, plus there is only a small part of the hardwood floor in the kitchen. I can't figure out how to get the bottom of the window.
You didn’t mention generative fill at all. I have been using that a lot. It can be very dumb, but also amazing.
And for good reasons: First, this video is on the remove tool, hence the title. Second, Photoshop's generative AI fill is still in Beta and it is not available for commercial work, so we can't use it for clients. Third, generative AI fill will very likely come with restrictions and licensing, something I covered in an earlier video at th-cam.com/video/K_5NtV3MIpY/w-d-xo.html Fourthly, I have a video on generative fill at th-cam.com/video/G0zg6kI8yUs/w-d-xo.html And lastly, generative AI fill is not as controllable as other edit/remove methods (something also discussed in those other videos), so, as I mentioned in this video, it's good to know not just the AI tools, but also the traditional ones as well. If we rely on generative AI then it would make most editing jobs overly complicated with hit-and-miss results that would be mostly out of our control. But the remove tool provides a somewhat more controllable result.
Хорошо получается у тебя продолжай в тоже духе окей