
You may need to have that area for indoor photos, or other larger projects.

In this case, the background is just made of lawn and driveway. This is the real power of the tilt shift lens. This is very close to the corrected image! Unfortunately, you can see how much of the photo needs to be cropped out, which means that I will lose some of the structure in order to fill in the black background. Turning on the Grid lines, it makes it easier to adjust the dots to be straight to each other, and the rest of the photo adjusts along with them: Adobe Photoshop Perspective Warp – 4Ĭlicking the check mark gives you this image: Adobe Photoshop Perspective Warp – 5 Next, I moved the corner dots to the edges of that section of the house that I wanted to line up: Adobe Photoshop Perspective Warp – 3 I go for the top half of the house as this is where I saw the biggest change in the photo. It tells you to draw a box around the areas that you would like to straighten. This is the dialog box that pops up: Adobe Photoshop Perspective Warp – 1 In Photoshop, I selected the Perspective Warp tool by selecting it under the Edit menu. Today, I attempted to do the same correction on the left photos, but in Photoshop CC to see how close you can get in post.

Here is a repost of the two images – the one on the left uncorrected, and the one on the right straightened.

This special lens will straighten the angles of buildings that you photograph so that they do not have that “falling away” look that you get when the camera is pointed up towards the top.
PERSPECTIVE WARP PHOTOSHOP PC
The post compared two images from a Nikon PC (perspective correction) or tilt-shift lens. Thanks to feedback from my photographer friend, Jae, I decided to try editing the photo from yesterday’s post in software.
