These five 
lessons seem to have gone swooshing by, even if we took a longer break 
during the summer. However, the photo about Prince St Imre's statue is 
still unfinished. Even now we can find minor flaws to correct, as you 
will soon see.
 
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1. Load the  photoIn
 earlier articles of the  series, we adjusted contrast, brightness, and 
colors, and made chromatic  aberration and unwanted objects disappear. 
Let's take another look to find  something else to edit. Well, there's 
the perspective, and the photo would also  need some cropping.
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2. 
                      AskewPerspective distortion can be  best spotted by the base of the statue, especially when the grid is turned on  (click View/Grid). It is a very handy tool for spotting such defects.
 
The
 top of the base is less askew than the bottom, and skewness cannot  be 
spotted on the statue itself. Therefore, we'll have to stretch the 
bottom  left corner of the picture, and we need perspective correction 
to do so. |  |  
 
          
 
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3. 
                      Down with the corner!You may want to leave the grid  switched on, as it can help you with the adjustment.
 
                      Perspective correction is carried  out almost 
exactly as it has been shown previously, but now we make it a little  
simpler: there's no need to fiddle with menus. Just press Ctrl+A to  select the whole picture, and Ctrl+T to switch to the Transform
 tool. A thin border appears, with handles on the sides and corners. You
 can  drag them to resize the picture, but this is not what we need. We 
just want to  move one corner.  
Press and hold Ctrl, and click
 the bottom left corner.  Drag the mouse downwards until the lower 
straight lines of the statue base get  horizontal. You can also use the 
top left corner for the correction, but it  needs to be dragged 
downwards even less. Press Enter when you're done to  commit your changes. Perspective correction is finished. |  |  
 
          
 
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4. 
                      CroppingAnother
 problem is the composition  being too open. The left side and 
especially the top of the photo cries out for  some cropping, doubly so 
as the top shows a blank bar produced by perspective  correction.
 
                      Select the Crop tool from the  Tools palette (or press C). Make sure that No Restriction is selected in  the options bar at the top and Width and Height are left blank.  
                      Select the whole photo with the Crop tool, press and hold Shift, and drag the top left handle to specify the  desired amount of cropping. Holding Shift
 preserves aspect ratio during  dragging. Not using it lets you freely 
resize the area even to a  landscape-orientated rectangle, but we want 
to keep the original layout, and  just crop the left and top areas.  
If you are done with the setting, press Enter or click the green  check mark in the bottom right corner of the marquee. |  |  
 
          
 
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5. 
                      A straight stanceThe
 changes made to the  photo are not very spectacular at a first glance, 
but we made horizontal what  originally is, and the composition fits the
 main theme better. The statue  became even more of a central motive of 
the picture.
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Reference: digiretus
 
 
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