Cropping images

You can remove unwanted portions of an image to create stronger compositions or to draw attention to another area of the image. Corel PaintShop Pro helps you crop by providing presets to common image sizes, such as 4 × 6 inches or 10 × 15 centimeters.

Cropping reduces the amount of hard drive memory required for storing the image. In addition, cropping can improve color corrections by eliminating extraneous areas of color. If a photograph requires both cropping and color correction, you should crop the image first and then apply the color correction.

Before printing an image, you can crop it to a specific print size. In addition, you can select an area within the image and then crop the image to the selection borders. You can also create a new image from the cropped area.

You can also rotate the crop rectangle and stretch it outside the bounds of the image. In this case, the crop command resizes the image so that the whole new image fits into the new shape.

You can crop an image based on its opaque (nontransparent) areas. Cropping in this way is useful when you want to eliminate transparent areas at the edges of the image. You can also set the crop area to cover the opaque area of a single layer or of an entire image.

Important! Cropping permanently removes the image area outside the crop rectangle. To preserve the original photo, use the Save As command, and save the cropped version of your image to a new filename.

To crop an image Back to Top

Edit workspace 

 

Specify the Pixel Dimensions values in the Width and Height controls or the Document size values in the Width, Height and Units controls.
Mark the Maintain aspect ratio check box on the Tool Options palette. This option is available only for custom-defined crop rectangles.
Click the Rotate Crop Rectangle button on the floating toolbar.
Specify the degree of rotation in the Angle controls on the Tool Options palette.
Specify the X and Y coordinates under Pivot on the Tool Options palette or hold down Ctrl, and then drag the axis point of the rotation handle (the circular end of the handle) to a new position.
Click the Center Pivot button on the Tool Options palette.
Choose File Preferences General Program Preferences, choose Transparency and Shading from the list, and specify the settings for Color and Opacity in the Shading group box.
Choose File Preferences General Program Preferences, choose Transparency and Shading from the list, and unmark the Enable crop shade area check box in the Shading group box.
Choose File Preferences General Program Preferences, choose Transparency and Shading from the list, and unmark the Enable floating crop toolbar check box in the Shading group box.
Choose File Preferences General Program Preferences, choose Transparency and Shading from the list, and unmark the Automatically display crop rectangle check box in the Shading group box.
Click the Clear button on the floating toolbar for the Crop tool.

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After cropping an image, you may notice that the Width and Height values on the Tool Options palette are each set at 0.100. These settings do not reflect the cropped image size. To see the image size dimensions after cropping, choose Image Image Information.

If you need to, you can stretch the rotated crop rectangle outside the bounds of the image. The area outside the original image will be transparent or filled with the background, depending on which layer you are working on.

To crop an image for printing Back to Top

Edit workspace 

To crop to a selection in an image Back to Top

Edit workspace 

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The selection can be any shape. Corel PaintShop Pro positions a crop area rectangle around irregularly shaped selections.

If you crop to a selection that is feathered, the current background color fills in the feathered region of the selection.

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You can also crop to the selection by choosing the Crop tool and clicking Current Selection in the Snap crop rectangle to group box on the Tool Options palette. Adjust the crop area, and click Apply .

To crop to an opaque area in a layer or an image Back to Top

Edit workspace 

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If any layer has a solid-color (nontransparent) background, the entire layer or image is selected as the crop area.

Opaque areas that are not rectangular may have transparent areas remaining after cropping.

To create a new image by cropping Back to Top

Edit workspace 

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This feature offers a useful method of creating individual images from a scan of multiple images. For example, if you scan four photos in one scanning session, you can use this feature to quickly separate each photo into an individual image file.


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