Website thumbnails and cards
Match the aspect ratio and rendered size of the website component so repeated images align cleanly. Crop can fill the card edge to edge, while Contain is safer when the complete graphic must remain visible.
Enter exact pixels, keep proportions natural and choose how the image fits.
Drop an image here, or paste from your clipboard.
Your image stays on your device.Changing width and height should not squeeze faces or stretch products. PhotoCropper offers three fit modes so the result stays geometrically correct.
Fills the exact output and removes content outside the frame. Use it when edge-to-edge coverage matters.
Keeps the complete image visible inside the requested dimensions without changing its proportions.
Fits the image and fills the remaining area with a selected background. This is useful for product feeds and fixed-size templates.
Pixel dimensions describe the file, not how large it will look on every screen. A 1200×800 image has a 3:2 ratio; a 1080×1080 image is square. Choose a format and quality that match the destination, then verify the downloaded file in the app where it will be used.
If you need the same exact dimensions for many files, use the bulk crop tool. For free-form composition, return to the photo cropper.
An exact-size image cropper is useful when a form, website component or content system validates pixel dimensions. The numbers alone are not enough: choose the fit mode that protects the important parts of the source.
Match the aspect ratio and rendered size of the website component so repeated images align cleanly. Crop can fill the card edge to edge, while Contain is safer when the complete graphic must remain visible.
Use Pad when a marketplace or catalog requires a fixed canvas but the product itself should not be clipped. Choose a background that matches the destination and leave consistent space around items across the feed.
Enter the required width and height, then use Crop to position the face naturally. Check separate rules for background, head size, file size and photo age, because pixel dimensions alone do not guarantee acceptance.
A wide canvas often needs a different composition from the original photo. Keep text-safe space in mind, avoid cutting through the main subject and preview the final file inside the layout where it will appear.
Aspect ratio describes shape. Pixel dimensions describe resolution. For example, 1200×800 and 1800×1200 are both 3:2, but the second file contains more pixels and can support a larger display.
When the source and target ratios differ, the tool must either remove edge content or leave space around the image. Crop, Contain and Pad let you make that choice explicitly instead of distorting the photo.
Crop enlarges and positions the image until the output canvas is filled. It is the right choice for banners, cards and thumbnails where blank space is not acceptable.
Contain scales the complete image into the target box. It can leave unused space when the source and target shapes do not match, but no source content is removed.
Pad also keeps the whole image visible and lets you select the background color. It works well for fixed product or document templates.
No. Crop fills the requested dimensions by removing outer areas. Contain fits the whole image inside the requested box, and Pad fits the image while letting you choose the background around it. All three modes preserve the source proportions.
You can enter values from 1 to 12,000 pixels per side, subject to available device memory and browser limits. Very large outputs may fail on a phone or older computer, so use the smallest dimensions that meet the destination’s requirement.
Crop fills every output pixel and may remove content from the image edges. Contain keeps the complete image visible and may leave space around it when the source and output have different aspect ratios.
Use Pad when the entire image must remain visible inside an exact canvas and you want to control the surrounding color. It is useful for product feeds, fixed templates and images that should not be cropped at the edges.
Use JPG for most photographs, PNG for transparency or hard-edged graphics, and WebP for a good size-to-quality balance in modern browsers. Confirm which formats the destination accepts before exporting.
Making a small source larger increases its pixel dimensions but does not add real detail. Start with the largest clean original available, avoid unnecessary enlargement, and inspect the downloaded result at 100% before using it.