Wednesday, August 5, 2009

5 Secrets of the Photoshop Crop Tool

#4 might be useful for you...

 
 

Sent to you by David via Google Reader:

 
 

via Digital Photography School by Helen Bradley on 8/5/09

If you're used to clicking the crop tool dragging the tool over your image and pressing Enter, it may surprise you to know that there are other options that you can use when cropping in Photoshop.

before_after.jpg

Here are my five "best-kept secrets" of the Photoshop crop tool.

1. Rotate as you Crop

When you drag the crop marquee over an image, you can rotate it by letting go the mouse button and drag on one of the corners of the marquee to rotate it. When you double click you will rotate and crop the image at the one time.

step1.jpg

2. Perspective Crop

You can fix perspective at the same time as cropping by first dragging a crop marquee over the image. Let go the mouse button and click the Perspective checkbox on the toolbar. Now when you drag on a corner of the marquee the corners move independently of each other allowing you to position the marquee along the lines you want to crop to in the image. When you crop the image it is cropped and distorted to create a rectangular image. You can use this to fix distorted perspective in your images.

step2.jpg

3. The Crop that's not a Crop

Once you have selected an area to crop, you do not actually have to crop it, and you can, instead, simply hide the cropped area rather than permanently deleting it.

step3.jpg

To do this, you need to be working on an image layer and not the background layer so double-click the background layer and convert it to a regular layer. Drag a crop rectangle over the image and from the tool options bar, select the Hide option. When you double click the cropped area will be hidden but still accessible.

step3a.jpg

You can now select the Move tool and reposition the image inside the area that you have cropped it to. This is useful when you want to crop an image to 4 x 6 in size and you want to experiment with different ways to compose the image within this area.

4 Create and Use Crop Presets

step4.jpg

When you click the Crop tool you can choose from various presets by clicking the dropdown list to the immediate right of the tool in the tool options bar. Click a preset and drag on the image to create the crop marquee. You can turn a portrait crop to a landscape one (or vice versa) by selecting the preset, drag over the image and then rotate the marquee ninety degrees by holding the Shift key as you do so to constrain the rotation to multiples of 15 degrees.

step4a.jpg

To create your own preset, set the width, height and resolution in the tool options bar and then click the fly-out menu for the crop tool and select New Tool Preset. Give your preset a name and click Ok. It will appear at the foot of the presets list and you can select and use it anytime in the future.

step4b.jpg

5 Crop to the Same Size

step5.jpg

To crop two images to the same size, select the Crop tool and make active the image you want to match the size of. Click the Front Image button on the tool options bar to configure the Crop tool with the dimensions of the front image.

step5a.jpg

Select the image you want to crop and drag a crop rectangle over that image. When you double-click to finish, the image will be cropped to the same size and resolution as the original image - in some situations this may mean that the image will have increased in size.

Warning:

If the Crop tool isn't working as expected, press Esc to exit the tool and click the Clear button to reset it - some settings are sticky and you may not remember you had set it to special crop settings earlier in an editing session.

step6.jpg

Next time you go to crop an image, remember that there are more options for the crop tool than may initially meet the eye.

Post from: Digital Photography School - Photography Tips.

5 Secrets of the Photoshop Crop Tool


 
 

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