Any lens wide enough to create that amount of distortion would show signs of converging verticals and spherical aberrations A tilt-shift lens could correct some of that out. Otherwise, it's a very bizarre photo.
Since when does one expect pictures hanging on walls to be straight? Hard to tell. I've shot everything from fisheye to 1200mm on 35mm to 8X10 rail cameras. I've never seen an effect that creates such a dramatic difference from a wide angle lens with people so close together without aberration of some sort.
It doesn't matter if they are hung straight. The frame sides should be parallel to themselves.
"without aberration of some sort."
That is only evidence your equipment was inferior. I can grab countless examples of wide angle lenses that don't have those problems with simple image searches.
Firstly, of coursed its shopped, it's a digitally processed image that had the distortion corrections applied. Secondly, stop using shitty screen grabs people upload here. When I use your tool with a high res image there is nothing that appears out of the ordinary.
Any lens wide enough to create that amount of distortion would show signs of converging verticals and spherical aberrations A tilt-shift lens could correct some of that out. Otherwise, it's a very bizarre photo.
Far left picture hanging on wall. Draw a line down the side.
Far right brown cabinet looking thing. Draw a line down the side.
Large picture in the middle. Draw a line down both sides.
Oh look, converging verticals.
Since when does one expect pictures hanging on walls to be straight? Hard to tell. I've shot everything from fisheye to 1200mm on 35mm to 8X10 rail cameras. I've never seen an effect that creates such a dramatic difference from a wide angle lens with people so close together without aberration of some sort.
Run the image through here and run ELA at 75%. Looks 'shopped to me: https://29a.ch/photo-forensics/#error-level-analysis
It doesn't matter if they are hung straight. The frame sides should be parallel to themselves.
"without aberration of some sort."
That is only evidence your equipment was inferior. I can grab countless examples of wide angle lenses that don't have those problems with simple image searches.
"Looks 'shopped to me: https://29a.ch/photo-forensics/#error-level-analysis"
Firstly, of coursed its shopped, it's a digitally processed image that had the distortion corrections applied. Secondly, stop using shitty screen grabs people upload here. When I use your tool with a high res image there is nothing that appears out of the ordinary.