Thanks Chris and Igor for the comments. 
The Level display in the viewfinder is wonderful and I usually take advantage 
of it. Sometimes I don’’t. There is nothing in the Exif that says (Dummy did 
remember to check the Level on this on.” So when I see an image like this, I 
fiddle with it. It may have been better to leave it alone! As shot was probably 
more level. I’ll go back and redo if/when I have the time.

Meanwhile, I am more concerned in this image with the fact that, when I did my 
2-3° rotation in Lightroom, the rotation was not smooth and I am seeing a tear 
in the image, a diagonal straight line in the lower left of the image. Not sure 
how well it shows in the version I posted. I’ve never noticed that sort of Fail 
in Lightroom before.

stan

On Mar 31, 2014, at 5:03 PM, Igor Roshchin <[email protected]> wrote:

> 
> Chris:
> 
> Sloped horizon is in the rule 5 on this (almost 6-year old) list:
> http://www.komkon.org/~igor/coolphotog.html
> :-)
> 
> Stan: that's a nice, very peaceful image.
> 
> Cheers,
> 
> Igor
> 
> 
> 
> Mon Mar 31 02:18:29 EDT 2014
> Chris Mitchell wrote:
> 
>> Nice feel. One of David Bailey's shots at his exhibition had a sloping
>> horizon so I forgive you yours...
>> 
>> Chris
>> 
>> On 30 March 2014 14:59, Stanley Halpin <stan at stans-photography.info> 
>> wrote:
>> To counter-balance Boris' night-time traffic shot, here is another view of 
>> life in Tel Aviv.
>>> 
>>> http://photos.stanhalpin.com/p155717848/ef169e98
>>> 
>>> stan
> 
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