Straighten a photo in Photoshop, Photoshop
Elements and Paint Shop Pro
Helen Bradley
There's nothing quite so visually off-putting as
an image which is nearly straight but not quite!
Whenever you take photos, you're
generally concentrating on so many things that occasionally you forget
to check that everything is straight. The result is an image which is on
an angle and which doesn’t look as good as it should. Sometimes too, the
very angle that you're shooting at results in an image where lines in
the buildings, or the image subject, which should be perpendicular
simply aren't. Most graphics programs have tools which help you fix
these problems. We'll look at ways you can do this in both Photoshop and
Photoshop Elements as well as in Paint Shop Pro.
Simple
straightening
The simplest straightening task
you will have is to adjust an image which is simply not straight. This
typically occurs where a line such as the water line or horizon line is
not straight. It can also happen when there is no visible horizon but
where a strong horizontal line in the image, such as a fence rail, is
not quite horizontal.
To fix an image in Paint Shop
Pro 8 use its straighten tool. Click the Straighten tool in the tool
palette and a bar appears on your image. Drag it so its ends are at
either end of a line in the image which should be horizontal (or
vertical) such as the horizon, water line or fence rail. The Paint Shop
Pro marker should touch this line along its length - what you're doing
is marking the line you want PaintShop Pro to straighten. When you're
done, click the Apply button in the Tool Options palette for this tool
or double click the image. If you want to fix a vertical line rather
than a horizontal one, choose Make Vertical from the Mode dropdown list
for this tool before clicking Apply.
As with any straightening task,
when you're done you must crop the image to square it up as you will
lose the straight edges of the image when you straighten it.
The method for straightening an
image in Photoshop is to use the Measure tool which shares a toolbar
position with the Eyedropper and Color Sampler tools. As with Paint Shop
Pro, drag the Measure tool so it lies along a line in the image which
should be horizontal. When you have it lined up correctly, choose Image,
Rotate Canvas, Arbitrary. The value which appears in the Angle area of
the dialog is the exact angle you've described with the Measure tool so
click Ok to rotate the image into position. You can now crop the image
to size to remove the problems around its edges.
Use the
Photoshop measure tool to measure the angle to rotate an image to
straighten it.
If you're using Photoshop
Elements you can get a similar result if you use its Line tool to
determine the angle to rotate the image. Start by choosing Window, Info
and drag the Info palette somewhere you can see it clearly. Now choose
the Line tool (it shares a spot with other shapes like the Rectangle and
Ellipse tool) and drag a line along the part of the image which should
be horizontal. Don't let go the mouse button until you have read the
angle measurement for this line in the Info palette. Take note of this
(it's the rotation amount), and then choose Edit, Undo to remove the
line you just created. Choose Image, Rotate, Custom and enter the value
you got from the Info dialog and press Ok. The image will rotate into
the correct position.
In
Photoshop Elements you need to find a way of determining the angle to
rotate.
Keystone
issues
Some straightening problems are
more complex than a horizon line being crooked. Typically when you shoot
pictures of buildings from a position on or near the ground, the tops of
the buildings curve inwards so that the buildings are wider at the
bottom than at the top. A similar thing occurs when you shoot a photo of
a picture on a wall – if you're not exactly level with the picture the
top and bottom edges won't be the same size.
This is, in fact, exactly how we
see the world every day but a conversation between our eyes and brains
makes the necessary adjustment to our perception and we see the picture
as rectangular and the building as the same width at the bottom as at
the top.
When we capture this effect in a
photo, however the distortions become more evident and you should fix
the image so that the object you've photographed looks the right shape.
To do this, use those tools your program has to offer. Paint Shop Pro 8
has an excellent Perspective tool which fixes perspective problems very
well indeed.
If you're using Photoshop,
you'll find the recommended way to fix perspective is to use the crop
tool with the Perspective checkbox selected. In fact this is a difficult
tool to use and the results aren't always great to look at. Instead, I
recommend the process shown in the step by step example opposite. If you
use this technique you'll end up with great results every time.
Paint Shop
Pro
Of all the programs, Paint Shop
Pro 8 has the best and easiest to use tool for fixing perspective
problems.
In
Paint Shop Pro, click the Perspective tool which you'll find sharing a
toolbar position with the Deform, Straighten and Mesh Warp tools. When
you select it you'll see a selection box appear on the image with
handles at all four corners.
Drag
each of the four corners of the shape to marks the four corners of the
building which should be perpendicular to each other. Make sure you
locate both the horizontal and vertical sides of the shape carefully
along the lines of the building.
When
you're done, click the Apply button on the Tool Options palette for this
tool (press F4 to display it if it is not visible). When you're done,
you can crop the image to size to remove the areas which are 'missing'
from the edges of the photo.
Fixing
Perspective in Photoshop
The perspective crop tool in
Photoshop crops the image at the same time so it's not as useful as it
might be. Here's a workaround solution which also works similarly with
Photoshop Element (although it doesn't provide guides to use):
With
the image open in the editing area, click the Zoom tool and decrease the
zoom by one or two clicks. Once the image is smaller than the editing
area, grab the window's bottom right corner and drag so you have a grey
area around the image.
Using
the rulers click and drag one or more vertical and horizontal guides to
use to line up the image with. Drag them into place. Now hold the
Control key as you drag each corner of the image out or in until the
building lines up against your guides.
When
you're satisfied with the result, press Enter to confirm it. Any image
outside the image area (on the grey area), will be cropped away. You can
now remove the guides by dragging them back over the ruler.
(c) H Bradley,
2007-2009 |