Adobe photoshop cs2 User Manual
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ADOBE PHOTOSHOP CS2
User Guide
Vertical Perspective
Corrects image perspective caused by tilting the camera up or down. Makes vertical lines in
an image parallel.
Horizontal Perspective
Corrects image perspective, making horizontal lines parallel.
Angle
Rotates the image to correct for camera tilt or to make adjustments after correcting perspective. You can also
use the Rotate Straighten tool
to make this correction. Drag along a line in the image that you want to make
vertical or horizontal.
Edge
Specifies how to handle the blank areas that result from pincushion, rotation, or perspective corrections. You
can fill blank areas with transparency or a color, or you can extend the edge pixels of the image.
Scale
Adjusts the image scale up or down. The image pixel dimensions aren’t changed. The main use is to remove
blank areas of the image caused by pincushion, rotation, or perspective corrections. Scaling up effectively results in
cropping the image and interpolating up to the original pixel dimensions.
cropping the image and interpolating up to the original pixel dimensions.
To adjust the Lens Correction preview and grid
•
To change the image preview magnification, use the Zoom tool or the zoom controls in the lower left side of the
preview image.
preview image.
•
To move the image in the preview window, select the hand tool and drag in the image preview.
•
To use the grid, select Show Grid at the bottom of the dialog box. Use the Size control to adjust the grid spacing
and the Color control to change the color of the grid. You can move the grid to line it up with your image using
the Move Grid tool
and the Color control to change the color of the grid. You can move the grid to line it up with your image using
the Move Grid tool
.
Setting camera and lens defaults
You can save the settings in the Lens Correction dialog box to reuse with other images made with the same camera,
lens, and focal length. Photoshop saves settings for distortion, vignetting, and chromatic aberration. Perspective
correction settings are not saved. You can save and reuse settings in two ways:
lens, and focal length. Photoshop saves settings for distortion, vignetting, and chromatic aberration. Perspective
correction settings are not saved. You can save and reuse settings in two ways:
•
menu
Manually save and load settings. Set options in the dialog box, and then choose Save Settings from the Settings
. To use the saved settings, choose them from the Settings menu. You can also load saved settings that
don’t appear in the menu using the Load Settings command in the Settings menu.
•
Set a lens default. If your image has EXIF metadata for the camera, lens, focal length, and f-stop, you can save the
current settings as a lens default. To save the settings, click the Set Lens Default button. When you correct an image
that matches the camera, lens, focal length, and f-stop, the Lens Default option becomes available in the Settings
menu.
current settings as a lens default. To save the settings, click the Set Lens Default button. When you correct an image
that matches the camera, lens, focal length, and f-stop, the Lens Default option becomes available in the Settings
menu.
Reducing image noise
Reducing image noise
Image noise appears as random extraneous pixels that aren’t part of the image detail. Noise can be caused by photo
graphing with a high ISO setting on a digital camera, underexposure, or shooting in a dark area with a long shutter
speed. Low-end consumer cameras usually exhibit more image noise than high-end cameras. Scanned images may
have image noise caused by the scanning sensor. Often, the film’s grain pattern appears in the scanned image.
graphing with a high ISO setting on a digital camera, underexposure, or shooting in a dark area with a long shutter
speed. Low-end consumer cameras usually exhibit more image noise than high-end cameras. Scanned images may
have image noise caused by the scanning sensor. Often, the film’s grain pattern appears in the scanned image.
Image noise can appear in two forms: luminance (grayscale) noise, which makes an image look grainy or patchy, and
color noise, which is usually visible as colored artifacts in the image.
color noise, which is usually visible as colored artifacts in the image.