Out of all the picture cropping apps, Adobe Express lets you cut pictures quickly so you can share them instantly. Download your newly cropped photo to share on social media or any other printed or digital destination.

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Upload your photo to the crop tool and select the desired cropping area by dragging the handles. Once you are satisfied with the location of the crop selection, you are ready to make your crop. Download your newly cropped image directly to your device. Cropping has never been easier with the free Adobe Express crop image app.

More than just an image cropper app, Adobe Express offers even more photo editing tools that are free to use. Enjoy professional quality editing features such as removing the background, applying filters, and adding animations. Access these features and so much more anytime, anywhere on both desktop and mobile.

The sidebar (which can be toggled on and off), houses some additional settings for your cropped image. Next to the target format, you can change the filename, set the DPI, and for JPG and PNG images, you can also set the desired image quality. The latter can have an impact on the file size of your image. The lower the quality, the smaller the file.

With Img2Go, you can crop your images and photos for Instagram, Facebook, uploading it somewhere else or sending it to your friends and family from basically anywhere. All you need is a working internet connection. With Img2Go you can crop photo and image files on the go!

Then it suddenly occurred to me that all I really need is to regenerate my Adobe-brainwashed synapses and give myself in to the Affinity workflow by simply rethinking some ways how to do things. The Affinity crop tool is quite powerful. It just works differently. Meanwhile, I've finished my "crop tool transition" successfully.

Hi @San Lee, @I just want copy selection,

Welcome to affinity ForumsĀ 

Thanks for your feedback. Is there any other reason/workflow/use case besides being able to crop from arbitrary/non-rectangular selections for this request which can't be performed using Affinity's Crop Tool?

@Alfred

That's not the same: crop to a selection acts on the whole image(layers) whereas copying a selection and using the New From Clipboard command only pastes the content of the layer that was selected.

@Alfred

That's not the same: crop to a selection acts on the whole image(layers) whereas copying a selection and using the New From Clipboard command only pastes the content of the layer that was selected.

Photoshop's cropping tool is really powerful, it crops the whole document, so all layers too. A simple Cmd + Z allows you to return to the whole file and to select again an element to be cropped (Cmd + click on a layer). And unfortunately, Affinity Photo is far from matching Photoshop for this function (but only for this part! Affinity Photo is excellent otherwise! But it is this part that prevents me from using it at work).

Thank you! That answers part of my request! Only part of it, because in my production, I also have to adjust the size often. I crop a picto, resize it to the right size, save, undo x2, and start again with another one (which can be a different size).

As someone in that thread pointed out, all that needs to be done is to make the crop tool snap to the selection if you press Enter/Return without changing the crop box (in PS it's Enter/Return to snap and preview, then again to confirm and crop). The cropping tool itself doesn't need to be changed in any way, just the input. And even the snapping is already there (Snapping - Snap to pixel selection bounds will do exacly this if you move the edges of the crop box near the selection), so all we're asking for is making this fully automatic. And at that point we could even go one step further and have an option to keep the crop a certain distance away from the boundary (i.e. boundary + [insert number] px on each side). This would be very useful when editing photos of rectangular objects (e-g- TVs) that just don't look right if there isn't a bit of background visible on each side.

And FWIW, "Export selection" isn't the solution if it's not the final step. When I was editing the TVs mentioned above, I'd often have to remove lens distortion. The quickest way to do this was to select the layer with the TV, crop to selection, and THEN deform the thing to get an uniform gap on all sides. An extra step or two can be a big deal when you'd have to do it 30+ times a day (especially since there are already several extra steps in e.g. creating a selection from multiple curves)...

You don't have to zoom out and adjust the existing default crop rectangle. Just click anywhere to draw a new one, wherever you want, at any zoom level you want. Moreover, if your snapping settings are set up accordingly, the pointer will already snap to the selection boundaries before you start to draw.

Every time I load in a new picture to edit it I go to the crop tool. About 95% of the time I want to crop in the same ratio that I took the photo in. I have to think that most people are doing the best they can to frame there photos the way they want them to be. Also there is no use working in free mode as default because it does not relate to printing. It only makes sense to me that the default operation of the crop tool should be set to the ratio that the document is when loaded.

If you're composing in camera, and especially if you want to keep the same ratio, why do you need to crop at all. Can't you simply resize (Document > Resize Document...) to the desired size before export, or specify the new size during File > Export?

I do every single time I have to crop. Having to select it every single time by default as opposed to Photo starting with a constrained ratio is so annoying. Free form cropping is VERY rarely useful in photography in my experience.

I made an account just to add to this thread. I have a recurring task that implies cropping images from different sources to 1:1 ratio. I have to select 1:1 from the dropdown, then check darken border, then finally crop. Do this 20-30 times in a row and you'll see the issue.

I too face the same issue, it's a bit annoying. First time if I set to original ratio its fine, but if i change my mind to crop again i have to go back to step to 1 setting Orginal ratio from the dropdown. Worst case scenario I forgot to set the crop in orgianl ratio , all photos end up with different ratios

Additionally , please make it so holding down shift will keep proportions. All your other tools work this why (though opposite), so it feels odd that the crop tool does not work in the same way. Or perhaps default to keeping proportions, and then holding down shift allows you to freely change the cropping (so it behaves like the transform tool or marquee tool)

The crop tool is the one tool I use a lot and the biggest reason Affinity is not my main editing software. It's not user friendly if you edit large numbers of images at one time. I shoot sports events. I have a very efficient work flow to edit 40 to 100+ images from an event. Here's what I don't like about the crop tool... some of it mentioned above. BTW - I'm on a 2015 MacBook Pro running Mojave (but I'll be upgrading soon to the new OS) and version 1.7.3 of Affinity.


The crop tool doesn't have a preset for the size I use. I use a native camera sensor crop size... 16.32 x 10.88 inches. It divides down to basically a 6x4 at 300 dpi. Using the 4x6 setting in Affinity works, but resizes my image to 1/4 of what it really is, so that doesn't really work for me. I haven't found a way to add a preset unless I import it from somewhere else. Where? PS? That seems kind of weird. Also, the only way to keep the software from reverting to unconstrained for the next image I edit is to pick one of the presets from the little gear icon. Picking Original Ratio or Constrained, or what ever from the drop down will not keep the software from reverting to Unconstrained on the next image. I need for my selection to stick from image to image to image to image and from one session to the next. It needs to remember my last selection no matter what the circumstance.


Next is the tool bar that holds all the different editing icons. It doesn't stick either! When I save and close one image, the next image - even if already open - doesn't have any tool active. If I last used the crop tool, I want that tool to be active next image no matter the circumstance. Same as if I had the erase tool or any of the other tools active. It should be active next image no matter what the circumstance - next image, next session... even after an upgrade!


I know that those few mouse clicks don't sound like a lot, but if you are doing 100 images it adds up to several hundred extra clicks and countless minutes of processing time.


Please consider adjusting the toolbar and the crop tool to remember what the user was doing and make it immediately available for their next image. Till it gets fixed, I unfortunately can't use this software full time.


-Chimperil59 - 2351a5e196

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