Home Gallery Downloads Forums Chat Room Tutorials Newsletter Store Classes More Site Info
 
Tutorials/Articles 
 
 **FAQ's & General Information**
 For Beginners
 Photography
 
 **Site Specific Information**
 Site Basic Tutorials and FAQ's
 Crops and Challenges
 Tid-Bytes Index
 2005
 
 **Program Tutorials**
 Photoshop
 *NEW
 *Program Basic
 *Technique
 *Element
 Photoshop Elements
 *NEW
 *Program Basic
 *Technique
 *Element
 Paint Shop Pro
 *NEW
 *Program Basic
 *Technique
 *Element
 Digital Image Pro
 *NEW
 *Program Basic
 *Technique
 *Element
 Photo Impact
 *NEW
 *Program Basic
 *Technique
 *Element
 Corel Draw
 Photo Paint
 
 Filters, Tools and Utilities
Search

**Program Tutorials** : Photo Impact : *Program Basic

Last Updated:
Jan 20th, 2007 - 12:55:03


PROGRAM BASIC: Straighten Horizons in your Photographs
By Jeri Ingalls 2005
Apr 16, 2005, 04:56

Email this article
 Printer friendly page

It’s easy to forget to line up the horizon when getting an important, spur-of-the-moment photo for scrapbooking, but there are simple ways to fix this with Photo Impact and give you perfectly aligned portraits.

You can play around with the Free Transform Tools, or change the numbers in the rotation degree box and get good results, but you have to experiment with these a bit to get things where you want them.  A much simpler way is to use the Rotate using a Horizontal Line option.

In this example, the horizon isn’t too far off balance, but noticeable so I want to change it.  You first choose the transform tool on the left hand edge of your toolbar, than in the upper toolbar, chose the rotate method pointed out below, the Rotate using a Horizontal Line option.  A horizontal line with control boxes on both ends will appear on your chosen photo.

Simply move the square control points on each side of the line until the line is even with the horizon, than double click on the photo with your mouse or pen.  The computer does the work for you, taking all the guesswork out. 

             

There is also a vertical option that will work in the same way, line the line up along the edge of a building or a straight wall indoors, and use it to guide the computer to straighten out your photo as well.

All that’s left now is to crop the photo to remove the white edges.  Now you’ve got a perfectly aligned photo and are ready to scrap!


© Copyright 2003-2005 by Scrapbook-Bytes; & original creator/s of tutorials/articles

Top of Page