I have a shot of a car that is almost coming directly at the viewer. You can actually see the side of the car, but very slightly. I would like to be able to enlarge just the front of the car. transforming it will not work, because it will scale the whole car. Is there a better way. Maybe liquify? I have not used this feature very often, so if there would be any tricks to get it to come out perfect, that would be great.
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What if you select the front of the car, copy ‘n’ paste into a new layer and enlarge it (or reduce the size of the rest of the car, which would be preferable from a resolution standpoint).
I’ve done similar projects, and basically used Neil’s method. You can use the free transform tool to align the edge of the background image to the pasted foreground layer. It will take some finessing to get everything to look right, and of course won’t ever be exactly "real."
Remember, btw, if you copy and paste you should reduce the size (via distortion) of the background rather than enlarging the foreground layer, depending on the end resolution you’re shooting for. If you radically enlarge your pasted front-of-the-car you’ll resample it, potentially out of the safe range for your final output.
But I doubt it will be able to read a scanned in photo and create a wireframe for the object. I expect we’ll have to wait a few more years for that kind of extra-sensory computing capabilities.
oops. My bad. Yes, I complain about the imaginary technology in CSI to my wife all the time, but she insists they couldn’t put it in the show if it weren’t real. At least she didn’t believe McGiver was real.