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If you’ve scanned an image and it’s crooked when you bring it into Photoshop, you can fix it in about 10 seconds flat. Just switch to the Measure tool (it lives behind the Eyedropper tool in the Toolbox) and drag it along the top edge of the image you want to straighten. That’s the hard part (and that should give you an idea of how easy this technique is). Next, go under the Image menu, under Rotate Canvas, and choose Arbitrary. Photoshop automatically enters the amount of rotation (courtesy of your earlier measurement), so all you have to do is click OK and bam!—the image is perfectly straightened.
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If you have imported a 3D object that has a texture applied to it, that texture will show up as a sublayer with your 3D layer. To modify or replace the existing texture, simply double-click directly on the texture name in the Layers panel. A dialog will open with the 2D texture. Make whatever changes you need, then close and save the document. Just like a Smart Object, it will update automatically in the main document.
Toby Fairchild said on — June 20, 2008 @ 6:22 pm
Great job on the blog/site Corey and also the consistently incredible work you do on Layers TV. I use this feature almost daily in my work and have streamlined it a bit with some shortcuts. First I access the measure tool by pressing ‘ i ‘ 3 times (to toggle through the tools in that bin). Then I use my custom shortcut for the ‘rotate arbitrary’ command which is [ctrl] [shift] [alt] [A], and I’m done.