Image Crop: Cutting Photos Down to the Right Frame
Cropping removes parts of an image to focus attention or fit a specific aspect ratio. Done well, it improves composition; done poorly, it cuts off important content. This guide covers the practical rules.
Crop and resize sound similar but do different things. Resizing scales the entire image to a new size while keeping every pixel of the scene. Cropping cuts off part of the scene — pixels are removed, not stretched. Most photo editing involves a mix of both.
When to crop
- •To improve composition (rule of thirds, removing distracting edges)
- •To fit a specific aspect ratio (1:1 for Instagram, 16:9 for video thumbnails)
- •To zoom in on a subject without losing too much resolution
- •To remove unwanted content from the edges (timestamp, watermark)
Composition tips
- •Rule of thirds: place key elements one-third from each edge, not dead center.
- •Leave breathing room around the subject's eyes when looking off-frame.
- •Don't crop at body joints (knees, elbows) — looks awkward.
- •Crop to enhance, not to compensate for a bad shot.
Extended FAQ
Will cropping reduce image quality?
Cropping itself doesn't lose quality — it just removes pixels. But cropping a low-resolution image and then displaying it at original size will look softer because fewer pixels are spread over the same area.
Can I undo a crop after saving?
If you save over the original, no. Always work on a copy or use a tool that supports non-destructive editing.
Are my images uploaded?
No — runs entirely in your browser.
