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On advice from previous image, tried to get the horizon level. still think i am slightly out.
| Camera: | Canon |
| Lens: | 12 |
| Recording media: | JPEG (digital) |
| Title: | SunLight |
| Username: | |
| Uploaded: | 13 May 2009 - 12:09 AM |
| Tags: | General, Landscape / travel |
| VS Mode Rating |
100 (50% won) These stats show the percentage of wins and the rating score that your photo has achieved. You can go to the VS Mode by clicking on this icon. Signup to e2Signup to e2 to see which photo this has won or lost against in the vs mode |
| Votes: | 13 |
Comments
Emma has the permission Ian, not a problem, lol
Emma, as ian says, its a little down on the left side. i cant remember what software your using.
What you need to do is something like, Image, Rotate, Arbitrary. Enter an amount in the box. For this image I'd say about 0.5 degree (maybe a little less) and then the direction, either clockwise (cw) or counter clockwise (ccw). Have a look, and try to use a straight edge to check it. I use Photoshop, and have a grid I can overlay with straight horizontal and vertical lines to check it.
Another method, in the Photoshop series. You can use the ruler tool. Usually found as a sub tool in the menu (look slike a small ruler, literally). Choose a starting point on the horizon, say the far left side, left click, and drag the line across to another point on the horizon and left click again. If you make a mistake, there is a clear option at the top. Once you have your straight line. Got to Image, Edit, Rotate canvas, arbitrary. This time, the amount will be filled in for you, and you can just hit ok.
Hope this makes sense, feel free to give me a shout (or Ian) if you need anything more.
Anthony
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