

Lukashenko visited the camp last Friday, accompanied by state television cameras. And all the people in here, they're all sick, they're getting sick so bad," said Zanyar Dishad, an 18-year-old from Kurdistan who was with his family.

"People cannot wait any longer because the weather is getting really really cold.

The closest I could get in LR to what I think the OP might want was with a pre-cut exactly square-format image, setting a scale to -50 in Lens Correction and no Constrain Crop and then doing a 45 degree rotate in the top Crop Panel - and in that case the canvas was again not extended though, the active image was scaled down by the -50 (I presume that is %).People lining up in the snow waiting for food to be distributed at the warehouse.rehouse. If I check the constrain to crop then I will get a smaller crop of only active image pixels. the image-size/canvas-size is not extended). With "Constrain to Crop" unchecked, my image size is the same 6000x4000 (i.e. There I can only Rotate -10 to +10 degrees (as well as perspective shift, etc.). There is then the second Rotate control in Lens Corrections / Manual tab as you mention. I also have a "Constrain to Warp" which I can use in conjunction with the second rotate option in Lens Corrections panel to crop only valid image-containing pixels.

24MP 6000x4000 image using the top Crop panel, I get a crop which will not go outside the image boundaries - so the canvas is certainly not extended. In the top crop panel the max rotation angles are -45 to +45 degrees. I think there are two places to do an angle-specific rotate in LR (I am looking with LR5.6). being able to actually create new pixels beyond an original image 1:1 dimensions. I was using canvas size expression as per Photoshop usage - i.e. You can't fill the extended areas, though. Just use the rotation option in the Lens Corrections tab (under manual) and uncheck the 'constrain crop' checkmark. use Photoshop to make the canvas bigger - with whatever fill you want (better on a separate layer), and then use Lightroom to do the non-destructive rotate and crop after import of the resultant TIFF/psd/JPEG.Īctually, you can extend the canvas size when rotating in Lightroom. You can't extend the canvas size in Lightroom, but you can in Photoshop. Is it possible in Lightroom? Or should I just export and do the rotating and cropping in Photoshop? I have Lightroom 4. Sometimes, for example after rotating a photo 45 degrees, it would be handy to stretch the crop borders beyond the photo area.
