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Photoshop CS6 introduced a powerful new feature called Adaptive Wide Angle.
Essentially what it does is it allows a user to interact directly with the image
regardless of the orientation of their camera,
so you can get a straight, well corrected image.
What a lot of people don't realize
is you can use Adaptive Wide Angle on your existing panoramas, as well.
Let me show you how it works.
So here we are in Photoshop,
and we have a stitched panorama,
and all we have to do is go Filter > Adaptive Wide Angle.
Now because we have the exif data
that tells us what camera and what lens you have,
we know the physical dimensions of the lens,
so this curved line is automatically being drawn.
I just tell
Photoshop what area I'd like to be straight.
Now the real trick here is off to the sides.
Once you've drawn a line,
you want to little handles
and rotate to straighten this out
and we'll do that 1 more time on the right-hand side,
click on the image,
grab the handle,
rotate that down,
and you can see
that we've really quickly and easily
created a nice corrected panorama.
So there you see Adaptive Wide Angle
isn't just for single still images.
It's for your existing stitched panoramas, as well.
