Nice shot and generally good work. But the center vertical isn't quite straight. That throws it off if you're going for perfect alignment. If elements has the Edit/Free Transform tool use this to rotate the image before you correct the perspective. You might find that the perspective tool works better once the rotation is correct. If not, you can use distort. If you don't have the free transform tool, do a rotation of about 1 degree before correcting perspective. You want to make that centerline perfectly vertical. If you need to stretch it to eliminate a squat look, use the image size tool and change onlly the vertical dimension a small amount. Experiment until it looks right. Paul -------------- Original message ---------------------- From: Brian Walters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Hi Don > > I'm using Photoshop Elements 1. I tried the "Perspective" tool but > couldn't get it to look right so I ended up using the "Distort" > tool. > > > Cheers > > Brian > > ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ > > Brian Walters > Western Sydney, Australia > > > Quoting Don Williams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: > > > What program did you sue to make the correction? > > > > Don > > > > John Francis wrote: > > > It looks as though you've squashed it a little vertically > > > in the process of correcting the perspective. > > > > > > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------------- > Get a spam free email account - Visit http://www.bluebottle.com > > > -- > PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List > PDML@pdml.net > http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
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