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DPChallenge Forums >> Tips, Tricks, and Q&A >> Another Advanced editing question
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01/07/2007 10:58:33 AM · #1
This photo is unrelated to the one I have a question about except for one property âa blue sky without cloudsâ Now the question..
I have a photo I wish to enter into a advanced editing challenge. To straiten it properly I need to rotate 3 degrees to the right, if I crop after doing that I loose parts of the photo I would rather retain. But if I could clone or do something else to the upper blackened part which would be cloudless blue sky had the camera been strait in the first place it would be perfect. What can I do about it in advanced?

01/07/2007 11:38:04 AM · #2
Straighten the horizon with the skew tool instead: edit/transform/skew.

R.
01/07/2007 11:40:55 AM · #3
One tiny bump, and I will silently go back to my corner and behave.
01/07/2007 11:42:30 AM · #4
Did you not like the answer you received?
01/07/2007 11:42:33 AM · #5
Thank you Robert....
01/07/2007 11:53:17 AM · #6
To expand on that; by using the skew tool, you can limit the "damage" to one or two edges, depending on whether you need to skew in one plane or two planes to get desired result. As opposed to rotation, which costs you real estate on all four edges.

Relating this to what you just asked, it would appear that you are willing to sacrifice the bottom, left, and right edges if you have to, but don't want to lose the top right corner of the rocks. So for this one, you'd skew down the bottom left corner and, if necessary, skew left the top left corner; you'd lose some on the bottom and possibly some on the left, but nothing on the right or the top.

R.

ETA: incidentally, up to a point it's OK to cover edge rotation by cloning sky into the wedge. With tiny amounts of rotation it's absolutely been done; there will come a point when it's not acceptable (I wouldn't try it on 45-degree rotation, LOL) but for me the skew tool is the way I usually go. I actually rarely rotate anymore at all unless I am making extreme corrections.

One way the skew tool is REALLY useful is if you set up the camera deliberately rotated on an extreme WA shot to straighten a vertical near one edge; then you can skew the opposite edge up or down as needed to level the horizon while maintaining the vertical orientation the camera had provided.

Skewing is not legal in basic editing, though... Or I don't think it is anyway.

Message edited by author 2007-01-07 11:58:04.
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