 Hello, everyone. Welcome back to another Photoshop tutorial. This one is going to show you how to correct perspective quickly and step by step. Here's the original shot. It's leaning in, and it's got a little bit of a warpy, wobbly look to it. And here is the corrected shot up and down. Looks pretty good. Okay, how did I do it? Let's just start from scratch. I'm going to go ahead and grab the image that I used here, drag and drop it, create a new document. Okay, good. There we go. First step now, start your timer. We're going to go to Filter, and we're going to go to Camera, Raw Filter. We're going to correct this using Camera, Raw. In particular, we're looking for the geometry option over here. You'll see here there's a whole bunch of different options where they use AI to do it. We're going to go ahead and select the last one called Guided, where we draw the line, so we're determining the perspective. And what it does is you can draw vertical and horizontal lines. So I'm going to draw a vertical line through this column, just like this, kind of going through the middle of it, where I think the vertical line should be. So that's the first one. And then I'm going to draw one for this one as well, kind of right through the middle of the column. And as soon as I let go, it's going to go ahead and make some adjustments, some big adjustments, as you can see here. Also, I'm going to draw a horizontal line here, just to make sure that I've got everything kind of on topic. You can see here, like the top of the church there, that's a horizontal line looks like correct to me. So now I'm going to draw those three lines for this one. You can draw a fourth one, but it's not going to do too much. Click on OK, and we're almost there. Now you got two options from here. One, and this is the more commonly used one, is you can just go ahead and grab the crop tool, and then just crop the image in. I can show you how to do that and just go crop. And you just bring it in until, you know, something like that, and then something like that. And you've got the right image. But again, if you want the whole thing, we can actually hit command Z there. I'm going to show you how to use the lasso tool here, and we're going to do some content to where fill. So what I'm going to do is I'm just going to create a really simple selection around the white area here, just like that. Make sure you got the O there and collect it. And that one's going to connect a part of me, and then I'm going to keep holding down the shift key, so that you've got multiple, so you can do multiple selections. I'm going to select there, there, there, and there, and there again, seeing that little O or zero, so that they're both now connected. Now you go up to edit, and then nothing happens because I got to be selected on the layer. My bad. Edit content to where fill and now watch what happens. Nothing. We got to brush in what we want the content to where fill to consider. So I'm going to basically brush in this area here. You don't really need to brush in the middle, and then I'm going to brush in around this area over here, something like that. And do keep in mind that it's possible that this was already pre selected for you, but you can just click on the brush and add or subtract. If you want to subtract, you can just hold down the option key or the alt key, and then you'll subtract the areas that you want. Anyways, brush it in like that. Now click on OK and watch. Now you got some changes there. Now I'm going to go select, deselect. Holy smokes, we fixed it. It's perfect. Thanks for watching. Tell more stuff coming up. Stay tuned.