On Mon, 2020-06-22 at 03:31 +0200, Pat Brown via gimp-user-list wrote: > Hi. A friend has sent me a number of images of documents. He > photographed > the documents from an oblique angle. This results in the bottom of > the > document being wider than the top. Is there any way in Gimp to widen > the > top of the image so that it is the same width as the bottom edge? >
the easiest way to do this is to use the perspective tranform in gimp. 1. open an image 2. in the toolbox choose the "perspectivetool" (or, from the tools menu) 3. in Tool Options, switch to Corrective Mode, not Normal Mode. This makes the operation super easy. Under Guides in tool options, select Number of Lines and move the slider to 24 or so. 4. click on the image, and some lines should appear. These are the guidelines you just chose; if you want more, you can move that slider again. 5.Your goal is to make the guidelines parallel to the edge of the paper in the photograph. to do that, drag the corners. You'll need to zoom in and out a bit with the + and - keys (+ may be shifted on yuor keyboard). 5. when it's about right, press ok (or Transform) in the little floaty dialogue in the image window. It might say something else depending on your anguage of course. 6. use image->flatten image, to remove any transparency. This step isn't needed in all gimp versions. 7. use the crop tool if needed to trim the picture 8. use file->export and export to a new png file. 9. reward yourself with a chocolate. :) slave liam (ankh on IRC) -- Liam Quin - web slave for https://www.fromoldbooks.org/ _______________________________________________ gimp-user-list mailing list List address: gimp-user-list@gnome.org List membership: https://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/gimp-user-list List archives: https://mail.gnome.org/archives/gimp-user-list