Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Photography
  3. News

How to use Photoshop to make peepers in images look the same size

Add as a preferred source on Google

Here’s a scenario all photographers have had to deal with: You took a great image and everything looks fine and dandy — until you realize one of the subject’s eyes looks smaller than the other one. This can happen for a variety of reasons: Maybe the person was mid-blink when you took the image, or perhaps one of their eyes is just physically smaller than the other.

Regardless, it can be distracting and take away from an otherwise beautiful image, so what can you do to fix this? Luckily, in this day and age of Photoshop and easy photo editing, it is actually a really simple fix and you can do it in just a few moments by following a tutorial from photographer and educator Scott Kelby.

Recommended Videos

Believe it or not, the trick doesn’t even involve the eye that is too small. What you are going to actually do it copy the bigger eye, move it over to cover the smaller eye, and then play with a few minor details to ensure they match up. Now your subject has two same-size eyes. The whole fix should only take a moment or two once you get the hang of it.

Another option, should you want to give it a try, is Photoshop’s brand-new Face Away Liquify tool, which allows you to reshape the eyes with simple sliders. If the adjustment is minor, that could be an even quicker way to go.

You can grab more great Photoshop tips and tricks on Scott Kelby’s YouTube channel.

Anthony Thurston
Anthony is an internationally published photographer based in the beautiful Pacific Northwest. Specializing primarily in…
4K stabilized footage, 10km transmission range, and 93 minutes of flight for $309: the DJI Mini 4K is on sale
DJI Mini 4K Fly More Combo drops to $309 (31% off): 4K gimbal camera, 3 batteries, 93-min flight time.
DJI Mini 4K Fly More Combo deal

The DJI Mini 4K Fly More Combo is down to $309 at Amazon, a $140 saving off its $449 list price. For that you're getting a sub-249-gram drone with a 4K 3-axis gimbal camera, 10km video transmission range, and three batteries in the box for up to 93 minutes of total flight time. As entry points into serious aerial photography go, this is one of the more complete packages at this price.

get the deal

Read more
Want cinematic footage without a full camera rig? This 8K 360 drone bundle is $300 off
The Antigravity A1 Infinity Bundle drops to $1,699, which is a meaningful discount for an 8K 360 setup
Antigravity A1 8K 360 drone deal

Most drone deals are about shaving a little off a standard flying camera. This one is aimed at a different kind of buyer: someone who wants dramatic, creative angles and is willing to pay for a more ambitious capture style. The Antigravity A1 8K 360 Remote Control Drone (Infinity Bundle) is $1,699.00, saving you $300 off the $1,999.00 compared value. It’s still a premium purchase, but the discount is big enough to matter if you’ve been waiting for a better entry point.

get the deal

Read more
Save $500 on the Sony a7 III with 28–70mm lens, a full-frame starter kit that still holds up
Sony a7 III deal

If you’ve been trying to step up from a phone or an older camera without spending “brand-new flagship” money, this is a solid price cut on a kit that’s been a go-to for years. The Sony Alpha a7 III mirrorless camera with the FE 28–70mm F3.5–5.6 OSS lens is $1,699.99 (was $2,199.99), saving you $500. That discount matters because it gets you into full-frame territory with a versatile starter lens, which is usually the most expensive jump for people moving up in photo and video.

get the deal

Read more