If it was faces or parts of faces, something very specific in detail, then the answer, at least from my experience with the program, is most likely no. Louis H Depends on the nature of what was originally in those white blotches. It took me about 10 minutes to get the result I wanted. Well, I must say that Inpaint easily removed the pole and saved the day.
After all, if it is not intuitive, I probably don't want to use it. When testing out new software, I usually try to not read any directions. I wasn't expecting much, but Inpaint did a spectacular job removing the pole! My great shot was saved! It's possible that with practice they might work just fine, but in my opinion, a steep learning curve is hardly worth it.
I tried several software packages that remove unwanted objects and overall they didn't seem to work that well, were extremely slow, difficult to use and even cost way too much. As fate would have it, part of the plane was blocked by a large pole. One of the coolest photos I took was of an F/A-18 Super Hornet taking off almost vertically. Mitch Kite I will definitely be purchasing Inpaint and here's why: To use InpaintDelogo you will want to put InpaintDelogo.avsi in AviSynth+s plugins64+ folder.
Slightly blurry or out-of-focus backgrounds do great, but in-focus backgrounds that have a fairly consistent texture to them, as mentioned above, do well in version 3. Then a simple script to open your mp4 file will look like: Code: LSmashVideoSource ('c:pathtofilename.mp4) That is enough for you to preview the video (no audio) in avspmod by pressing F5. It works best, for me at least, with backgrounds that do not require high resolution results. It works best when the background it is using as the palette to fill in the blank with is consistent with itself, (such as snow, or sky, or trees, grass, rocks, sand, etc.,) and you may need to touch up some areas a second or third time, but for those photos where there is a fairly consistent background to use as a palette for "inpainting" the object to be removed, it works great.īut, as always, folks are encouraged to give it a test run to see if it does for your photos what you want it to do. I ran a few photos through both V2 and V3 and see clear improvements with V3 and will indeed pick up a copy when the offer goes Live next Thursday. I worked with Version 2 in the past (freebie from GiveAwayOftheDay) and was not all that satisfied with it. I really do like what has changed in Version 3 of Inpaint and I most definitely appreciate the short and to the point easy to follow video tutorials provided.
I have about 5 or 6 dedicated tools that do the same type of effect and each of them has their pros and cons. Louis H How many of these type programs do I need anyway?Īpparently as many as I can afford to purchase. We've scanned using a variety of antivirus software and can bring you the following results. Learn more about Virus Scan SHA-256 Hashes
The dask module is used to speed up certain functions.We've scanned the download using a variety of antivirus software and can bring you the following results. The pyamg module is used for the fast cg_mg mode of random Including specialized formats using in medical imaging.Ī Qt plugin will provide imshow(x, fancy=True) and skivi. Optional I/O plugin providing a wide variety of formats. You can use scikit-image with the basic requirements listed above, but someįunctionality is only available with the following installed: sphinx - gallery >= 0.10.1 numpydoc >= 1.0 sphinx - copybutton pytest - runner scikit - learn matplotlib >= 3.3 dask >= 0.15.0, != 2.17.0 # cloudpickle is necessary to provide the 'processes' scheduler for dask cloudpickle >= 0.2.1 pandas >= 0.23.0 seaborn >= 0.7.1 pooch >= 1.3.0 tifffile >= 2020.5.30 myst - parser ipywidgets plotly >= 4.14.0 kaleido Sphinx >= 1.8 # sphinx 4.3.0 broke support for sphinx-gallery 0.10.0 and below.