How to Straighten a Photo With GIMP

How to Straighten a Photo With GIMP

How to Straighten a Photo With GIMP GA S REGULAR Menu Lifewire Tech for Humans Newsletter! Search Close GO Software & Apps > Design 64 64 people found this article helpful

Straighten a Crooked Photo with GIMP

By Sue Chastain Sue Chastain Writer St. Petersburg College Sue Chastain is a former Lifewire writer and a graphics software authority with web design and print publishing credentials. She's also skilled in WordPress administration. lifewire's editorial guidelines Updated on April 4, 2020 Tweet Share Email Tweet Share Email Design Graphic Design Photoshop Animation & Video 3D Design We've all probably taken pictures when the camera wasn't perfectly level, resulting in a skewed horizon line or a crooked object. It's very easy to correct and straighten a crooked photo using the rotate tool in GIMP. Whenever you have an image with a skewed horizon, you must lose something from the edges of the photo to fix it. The sides of the image must be cropped to make up for the slanting of the photo from rotation. You always have to crop a photo when you rotate, so it makes sense to rotate and crop in one step with the rotate tool. GIMP 2.10.8 was used for the tutorial below. It should work for other versions up to GIMP 2.8 as well.

Straighten Your Image

Open your photo in GIMP. This photo was taken by a talented photographer on Unsplash. She didn't make it crooked, we did for this guide. With your photo open, move your cursor to the ruler at the top of the document window. Click and drag down to put a guideline on the image. Place the guideline so it intersects with the horizon in your photo. This doesn't necessarily have to be the actual horizon line as it is here in the practice photo shown -- use anything that you know should be horizontal, such as a roofline or a sidewalk. Select the Rotate Tool from the toolbox. Turn your attention to the tool options. By default, they're just below your toolbox. Set the Clipping option for the Rotate Tool to Crop with aspect. Select your photo to highlight it for rotation. From there, you have your choice of how to rotate it. You can click and drag the photo in a circular motion to adjust it. You can also use the slider on the Rotate window that just popped option to set your rotation. Finally, if you have a number in mind, you can punch it into the Rotate window to jump right to it. Once you have your image aligned correctly, press Rotate to set it in place. Things will probably still look a bit off to you here. The image is going to be floating in a bunch of empty space. Thankfully, GIMP has a way to fix that. Select Image from the top menu. Then, pick Crop to Content. On versions of GIMP prior to 2.10, Crop to Content was Autocrop Image. Take a look at the result. Your image should now be perfectly aligned with your horizontal guide. Next, get rid of that horizontal guide before you export your image. Go to Image > Guides > Remove all Guides to remove the guideline. You can export the result when you're ready. It'll be smaller than the original, but it will also be perfectly straight and horizontal. Was this page helpful? Thanks for letting us know! Get the Latest Tech News Delivered Every Day Subscribe Tell us why! Other Not enough details Hard to understand Submit More from Lifewire Straighten a Crooked Photo With Paint.Net Straighten a Horizon With GIMP Tutorial How to Take Better Sunset Photos With an iPhone How to Make a Torn Paper Edge in GIMP Tutorial to Add Fake Rain to a Photo in GIMP The 4 Best Photo Editor Apps of 2022 10 Best Free Photo Resizers 10 Best Free Photo Editing Programs How to Pixelate an Image How to Quickly Scan and Digitize Photos How to Fit a Whole Picture on Instagram How to Rotate an Image in Photoshop The 5 Best Alternatives to Photoshop for Android How to Take a Photo on a Chromebook How to Take a Screenshot on the LG G Flex How to Crop in Photoshop Newsletter Sign Up Newsletter Sign Up Newsletter Sign Up Newsletter Sign Up Newsletter Sign Up By clicking “Accept All Cookies”, you agree to the storing of cookies on your device to enhance site navigation, analyze site usage, and assist in our marketing efforts. Cookies Settings Accept All Cookies
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