In this image, there is a pretty clear square in the middle.įortunately, you can zoom in and pan/scroll around the image while you’re working you want to place the corners as precisely as possible. In the example of a building, you might choose the corners of a window. You must first find something in the image that is supposed to be a rectangle, and set the corner points on the corners of that shape. Positioning the corner points of the cropping “rectangle” can be tricky. Now you can drag each corner, to the proper place. After you draw the rectangle, Photoshop offers you the Perspective checkbox in the Options bar. ![]() Fortunately, it’s a quick fix in Photoshop with the Crop Tool.įirst draw a rectangle over some part of the image it almost doesn’t matter where. While visiting an amazing archaeological tourist spot, I wanted a photographic souvenir, but I had to keep to the catwalk around the edge. I’ll show two examples of this feature in action: Had to Shoot at an Angle The key is to turn on the Perspective checkbox in the Options bar after drawing the cropping rectangle this lets you grab the corner points and move them willy-nilly where you will. Whoa! Why would you use the Crop Tool to fix perspective and keystone? Because our faithful little Crop Tool offers a cool and mostly-overlooked option: adjusting for perspective. But for many images, you need a more extreme (but still very easy) solution: the Crop Tool. If the image has only slight keystone problems, you can probably fix them easily with Photoshop’s Filter > Lens Correction feature. The problem is that images shot at an angle suffer from a problem of perspective, where straight lines diverge at angles, called keystone. Similarly, if you take a picture of a tall building from the sidewalk, the vertical lines of the building appear skewed (they look like they get closer together near the top). ![]() For example, if you try to shoot a framed picture on a wall, the reflection of your camera’s flash often obliterates half the image. It’s hard to photograph many images head-on.
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