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Interior Camera Settings


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Hi Michael,

 

There is no real perfect setting, each scene is different. I do note you have changed your aperture on the settings - I normally keep mine at 36, which mimics a regular 35mm camera so I can relate to normal lenses.

 

Your stretched effect is due to it being such a wide viewing angle, so you are getting a lot of perspective distortion. If you close it up you will have less distortion but wont see as much of the room. It gets worse when you are looking upwards or downwards, then you will have converging parallels, which are very evident on wide angles.

 

Steve

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  • 2 weeks later...

As photographers in real life find out, the room is the room and unfortunately there is only so far you can go when opening up the camera before the distortion becomes too much.

 

One advantage you have over real life is that you can play with your camera position and even have it outside of the walls with those objects in the way invisible to camera, this can give you a little more room but too much and it'll become obvious, like the distortion.

 

The important thing is too make sure that the objects are removed from camera correctly otherwise your lighting will be ballsed up and look like the back wall has been bulldozed!

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