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[In Elements 1, the crop tool is found at position
#3 on the toolbox diagram.]
Drag a rectangular selection with this tool, and then press
Enter to delete that portion of the image outside of the
dragged outline. The crop selection borders may be altered
before pressing Enter, by dragging on the resizing handles
on each side, or the corners. Hold down the Shift key to
maintain the height to width proportions when dragging on
a corner.
Please note: If you have entered anything
in the Width and Height text boxes on the crop tool’s options
bar, your crop box will be constrained to the proportions
of those measurements. The side handles on the crop box
will disappear (see the section below explaining how this
works). If you want to get your crop box resizing handles
back, you will need to click the Clear button on the end
of the options bar to get rid of the Width and Height entries,
even if you have already deleted them from the text
boxes. Elements will continue to constrain proportions
of your crop boxes to whatever you had or have entered in
those boxes until you either click the Clear button or reset
the tool.
You may move the entire crop selection outline by placing
the pointer inside the selection, and dragging. To rotate,
hold your cursor near the corner of the crop selection until
it becomes a curvy arrow, then drag in a circular direction.
Note that you cannot rotate a 1 bit Bitmap mode image.
Tip - If you drag an outline around your image with
the crop tool, you can then drag on any of the resizing
handles to make the document larger thus increasing
your canvas size. If your document has a background layer,
the new canvas area will be filled with the background color
currently showing in the toolbox. If your bottom layer is
a regular layer and not a background layer, the new canvas
will be transparent. Dragging on a corner handle while pressing
the Shift key to constrain proportions is a quick way to
add a solid colored border to an image.
If you make a selection with the crop tool, and then don’t
want to crop it, press the Esc key, or the Cancel button
(circle with a line across it) at the far right end of the
options bar to escape.
An alternative to the crop tool is found by choosing Image
> Crop after making a selection with any of the other
selection tools. However, you cannot rotate or resample
your image. The User Guide recommends that you be sure and
set feathering to 0 when using this option.
The keyboard shortcut key for the crop tool is the letter
C.
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The illustrations below, are of the crop tool’s options
bar. As you can see, you may choose to crop to a fixed size by
typing values into the Height and Width boxes. This is useful
if you need to fit an image into a particular size spot in a layout.
When no numbers are entered in Width, Height, or Resolution you
can drag a crop selection to any size. This is the default setting.
There seems to be a lot of confusion about how the Width
and Height boxes work with the crop tool. Here is an example.
If you enter 2 in for Width, and 2 in for Height, this does not
mean that you can only drag a 2 inch square crop outline with
the tool. Or, as many people think, a two inch square outline
will be drawn on click. With those settings entered in the options
bar, you can drag a crop outline of any size, though the
proportions will be constrained to those of your settings, in
this case, a square. When you accept the crop by clicking the
big check box at the end of the options bar, or by pressing the
Enter key, the area within your crop outline will be 2
inches by 2 inches. If you have entered your current image resolution
in the resolution box, this necessarily involves resampling. If
the resolution box has been left empty, the image resolution will
increase or decrease to accommodate the new size, and no resampling
will occur. If you are cropping images for the Web, or don’t want
your image resolution changed, this may not be what you want.
If you need to draw the same size crop outline over and over
again, and do not want to have your image resized or resampled,
or have its resolution changed, use the rectangular marquee selection tool. In its
options bar, choose Fixed Size and enter the size you want. Click
in the image, and your selection will be drawn to the dimensions
you have set. Place the marquee tool within the selection outline
and drag to move it into place, or use the arrow keys to nudge
it, one pixel at a time. Then choose Image > Crop.
By clicking the Front Image button, the width, height,
and resolution boxes will show the values of the current image.
You have the option of leaving either the resolution, or sizes
blank, while filling in the other value. Elements will then alter
the image to compensate for the entered parameter. For example,
if you specify a new size, but leave the resolution box blank,
the resolution will change automatically to compensate for the
altered size.
The second options bar, shown below the first, is what you will
see after you have made a crop outline by dragging. Areas which
will be cropped from the image are covered with a semitransparent
color if you have the Shield box checked. The color of
the overlay can be changed by double clicking the color box, showing
black in the illustration. Opacity changes the
transparency of the overlay.
Clicking the large check mark at the right end of the
options bar will accept or perform the crop. You can also accept
the crop by pressing Enter on your keyboard. Clicking the Cancel
button or pressing the Esc key on your keyboard will refuse the
crop and deactivate the crop outline.
If you have doodled with a tool’s options and want to get back
to the default settings, click that tool’s icon at the far left
end of its options bar. Choose either Reset Tool to reset only
the current tool, or Reset All Tools to restore default settings
to every tool.
Please note that all descriptions, and illustrations featured
refer to files which are in Photoshop’s .psd format, and which
are in RGB color mode. Other file formats, and color modes may
generate different options. Some Photoshop features are not available
for images not in .psd format, or RGB color mode. To find what
color mode your image is in, choose Image > Mode.