Graphics Programs Reference
In-Depth Information
Step Three:
When Photoshop is done aligning and
blending your photos, a new document
will appear with your 19 images combined
into a single panoramic image (as seen
here). Parts of each photo wind up in
this document as a separate layer (as
seen in the Layers panel here), so if you
wanted to tweak the masks created by
Photomerge, you could (but we don't).
Let's go ahead and flatten the image by
choosing Flatten Image from the Layers
panel's flyout menu near the top-right
corner of the panel.
Step Four:
Now that we've flattened the image, we'll
need to crop it down to size to get rid of
the areas that were adjusted to make the
image stitch together properly. Sometimes
this is pretty minor, other times it's more
pronounced, like this, but either way,
you're just a simple crop away from hav-
ing your pano look right. Get the Crop
tool (from the Toolbox, or just press C )
and click-and-drag it out over the area
you want to keep, as shown here (I drag
it out as far as I can, without having any
white areas show up on the edges after
I crop). Once your cropping border is in
place, press the Return (PC: Enter) key
to lock in your crop.
Continued
 
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