Show pixel dimensions during crop

Good Morning,
I need to be able to see the pixel dimensions while I'm cropping.  I clicked on the "Info" pallet and it shows this in inches, however, I didn't see how to change it to pixels.  For some website work I need to set images to specific pixel sizes and yet be able to move around the image to crop where I need at these dimensions.
I also did a search here and in PS help - nothing found.
Thanks for your help,
Captain 1854

Set the Mouse co-ordinates to pixels in the drop-down menu in the Info palette.

Similar Messages

  • Show pixel dimensions when cropping

    The current crop tool allows one to specify the aspect ratio of a crop. It would be useful (to me, at least) to have a display of the actual pixel dimensions of the resulting crop. I can guess by eye, but sometimes I want to be sure that I do not go below some size.

    GrizzlyAK wrote:
    Yeah, there are LOTS of ways the Crop Tool could be improved, but here it is almost 2011 and LR3+ and nothing has changed since users started complaining back in 2007.
    You'll notice that this was from very few users (1, in this thread).  Most people just don't find a need for this.
    Cropping while zoomed in is a much more popular request.

  • Pixel Dimensions of Cropped Photo

    I cropped a photo and placed it into a Photoshop elements file, along with other shapes and text. I would now like to swap out that photo with a different one of exactly the same size and proportion. Where can I see the exact pixel dimensions of that cropped photo?

    In Editor, go to Edit>preferences>units and rulers. Next to rulers in the dropdown, select pixels
    On the program's top tool bar, go to Window and check info in order to access the info palette
    Next, access the rectangular marquee tool, and in the tool's option bar select mode:normal
    Trace the picture inside the frame with the rectangular marquee and read the pixel dimensions.
    HTH.

  • Pixel Dimensions after Cropping with "Use Photo Ratio"

    Why don't Pixel Dimensions (and Document Size) change for Image Size after cropping with "Use Photo Ratio" like it does after cropping with "No Restriction"? Using Photoshop Elements 10 and Crop Tool defaults.

    Thank you all. I think I figured out how to crop using "Use Photo Ratio"
    with Crop tool so that I can ensure that my photos are cropped only
    proportionately and PSE 10 doesn't upsample pixels:
    1) Select Crop tool.
    2) Set "Use Photo Ratio" in Aspect Ratio setting in Options bar if not
    already set.
    3) Make crop selection as usual but don't complete (commit) crop.  Will
    only be able to crop proportionately.
    4) When ready to complete crop, change Aspect Ratio setting to "No
    Restriction" which blanks out width, height and resolution setting.
    5) Complete (commit) crop as usual.
    Photo will be cropped proportionately, width and height will change
    automatically to cropped size and pixels will not be upsampled avoiding
    lose of detail, that is, PSE will behave as though No Restriction had been
    specified from the outset. Blanking width and height before making crop
    selection forces either Custom  or No Restriction setting which means that
    PSE will let me make non-proportional crop.
    PS. IMHO I think making "Use Photo Ratio" force upsampling is NOT a good
    "design feature" when you are not warned about it and are not given a
    choice to not make it upsample.

  • Custom cropping using pixel dimension

    The banner image module for my website requires images cropped to 940 x 400 pixels. When I use the Custom cropping function in PSE 12 (on a Mac OSX 10.9.2), it only shows a cm dimension. Can I do a custom crop using a pixel dimension?

    You should just be able to type 940 px and 400 px in the width and height fields
    Another way is to use the Rectangular Marquee Tool and use Aspect>Fixed Size then enter 940 px X 400 px

  • Cannot crop to an exact pixel dimensions

    I am having a hard time cropping to an exact pixel dimensions upon export.  For my work, I need to crop to exactly 2166X1600, with a tolerance of no more than one pixel off of those dimensions, i.e. 2166X1599. 
    I set crop tool to 2166X1600 and crop all of my images.  On the export I constrain to largest dimension of 2166 in both horizontal and vertical directions. Results vary widely from right on 2166X1600 to several pixels off on the short side.  Sometimes more than 1600, and sometimes less.  Any thoughts as to why these constraints do not work exactly?  Some sets of images I have to redo as many as 25% of a gallery of 200-300 images.  Any thoughts?  Thanks!

    See, I don't need to crop the original image to 2166X1600.  I need a finished image at 2166X1600.  Meaning, in theory I should be able to crop an image to 1:1.35375 ratio, which is 2166X1600, and export to constrain to 2166 on the longest side.  When it's constrained to 2166, the short side should always be 1600.   
    Here's where the problem is...  When you set the crop window to 2166X1600, you expect that when you size your crop on your image that the only options for the boundary are multiples of 2166X1600.  In reality, the crop visual boundaries are approximate.  Here's an example...
    I have an image that I have cropped to a finished size of 3185X2350.  Which is based upon a 2166X1600 crop.  When I export it, I need the 3185 to become 2166.  So the long side is constrained to 2166, and it is reduced by a factor of 1.47.  3185/2166=1.47  If I reduce the short side, 2350, by that same factor of 1.47 you end up with a short side of 1598.  Which is why I have a problem.
    My invalid assumption was that when you set specific pixel dimensions in the crop tool, that only those values would be shown in the crop tool's bounding box.  Photoshop can do it...

  • DPI or PPI during cropping?

    Is there a way to get a readout of the PPI or DPI in real time during cropping?
    Regards,
    David

    "Set one of them that you prefer to either cropped dimensions or megapixels."
    Yes, that shows the info I often need to see when cropping, but shouldn't there be something approaching instant feedback showing latest cropped dimensions (as in Photoshop)? On my Mac G4 1.47GHz (dual processor with 2 Gb RAM), LR seems to require approx 10 seconds before updating the info display to show current cropped dimensions. Is this typical? That's painfully slow feedback and makes cropping to a fixed pixel dimension a very tedious process.
    Phil

  • How do you find the pixel dimensions of a photo to embed in Illustrator CC?

    We recently upgraded our software from CS3 to CC. I'm having trouble determining the pixel dimensions of the photo I want to embed in Illustrator. In our old work flow, we simply clicked on the object in Illustrator, and then opened a new document in Photoshop, and it would retain the dimensions at our document size in Illustrator. It was then a simple matter to paste the photo into the box, position and crop and save as a PSD file and then place in Illustrator. That does not work any more in Creative Cloud. The object downsizes to 72 DPI while retaining the resolution setting. We need to keep our Illustrator files to the minimum, so embedding larger than needed files is not possible.
    I've researched a bit and I see others with similar problems, but I haven't seen a workaround or a way to determine the pixel size. Document info in Illustrator gives the 72 dpi pixel settings, even though the document is set to reproduce at 200 dpi.
    This is something that used to be so simple I didn't think much of upgrading. Now my workflow is horrendously long. I have to rasterize the entire graphic and then crop what is the inset photo. If there is a simpler way, please tell me. All the literature is backwards, about placing an already sized PS image into Illustrator. I need the other way 'round.
    Thanks in advance for any help.

    I think I have a workaround: Make sure the clipboard settings are on 72 by cutting and pasting a 72 dpi file in PS, as it seems Illustrator images are seen that way, no matter what the output resolution is. Click on Photoshop and start a new document. It will retain the proportions of the Illustrator image in 72 dpi. Then open image size and make sure the resample box is checked. Change the resolution to the desired, in my case 200.. Then place and crop your photo, and save the PSD file. Open Illustrator and place the PSD file. This works for me.

  • Is there any way to batch change resolution, but not pixel dimensions?

    I was changing the resolution of my digital photos from 180 to 300 ppi individually as I edited them, but sometimes I would forget. Since I need the higher resolution for printing, I decided to automate that step by using PSE's "Process Multiple Files" feature. I noted that the Resolution selection was grayed out until I checkmarked "Resize Images." Since I didn't want to change the number of pixels, I left those fields blank.
    When I started the automated processing I noticed it was terribly slow, so I cancelled it and looked at the resulting files. They had more than doubled in file size because PSE was nearly doubling the Pixel Dimensions! I don't want to try a work-around by "resizing" to the current pixel dimensions, because the processing still takes about 45 seconds per file, and if I've cropped the photos, the pixel dimensions vary. Is there an automated way to change only the resolution in PSE . . . quickly?
    Also, I really wanted to double the resolution from 180 ppi to 360 ppi, but PSE limits my choices to either 600 or 300 or less. I've read about Scripts, but I don't think PSE supports them. I have version 6.
    Thanks for some help.

    Thanks for your input, and you may be right, but I'm not sure. I'm still trying to figure this out. I know it's the same photo on my monitor, but I keep reading that print resolution (ppi) is different from pixel resolution (i.e. 2000x3000.) This is my situation-- I'm sending the photos to a publisher for printing in a book. The publisher did not specify a size in inches--in fact I think the photos will be different sizes when printed on the page. They told me to send the photos in at 1600x1200 pixels. I've heard that 300 ppi is the standard resolution for publishing, so to get decent quality printing of my photos I thought I should increase the resolution from 180 to 300. But thinking about the different sizes, it seems that the resolution (ppi) will change depending on the size the photo is actually printed. At 300 ppi, a 1600x1200 photo will be printed at size 5.333" X 4". If a photo is printed full bleed on the cover of the book that is 8" x 10.667", then it will be 150 ppi. So, I guess you are right that I don't need to worry about the ppi resolution for the book photos.
    Now, let me figure about what I need to print my own 4x6 photos. My digital camera was set to 16x9 jpg, so my workflow is to make PNG copies to work with and after editing, save them in the 16x9 format before cropping at 1600x1200 pixels, then sharpening before doing Save As jpg in Book folder. I was thinking I needed to change the resolution to 300 ppi when saving in the 16x9 format so if I want to later make 4x6 prints, I'll have good quality prints. But you have made me think a little harder--what I do is choose the 4x6 crop tool which takes care of whatever ppi resolution is needed for that size print. Oh good, you have saved me extra work. Thanks!
    (BTW, I choose the 16x9 format because I was planning to use the photos in a widescreen slideshow, but my husband wanted something he could hold in his hand--hence, the book . . . and a lot of cropping!)

  • Pixel dimensions for still images

    Hello all,
    I have just ran into a problem that seems to be a sizing problem with Final Cut Express HD. I used to crop my still pics to 1366 px - 768 px (for landscape) and then import them to FCE and export as a quicktime movie. When I brought the quicktime movie into iDVD and created the DVD it seemed to play great on my 46" Samsung tv -- full screen.
    I just recently bought a Samsung 60" and when I create the same type of movies, I am getting a huge black border around the whole image (not just top and bottom but sides too). I tried creating a new movie and made all my still images 1920px x 1080 px, and it still comes out the same way.
    I can stretch my tv so that they go full screen, but I think there should be a way to create the movie without having to stretch it....just have the tv set for 16:9, and I feel that it should work.
    Any help would be greatly appreciated...thanks.
    Norm

    When you create a DVD, no matter what the pixel dimensions of your original material, it become 720x480 Standard Definition. This is what a DVD is. If you are creating a DVD that has material that is 16x9, then it creates a DVD that is 720x480 but plays back anamorphic, stretching to create the 16x9 screen.
    If you play one of your older DVDs that played correctly on your previous TV, does it play correctly or does it also exhibit the black bars?
    If it plays correctly then something has changed in the way you are creating your project in FCE.and encoding and burning the DVD.
    If the older DVDs also exhibit the same playback problem, then I believe there is a menu setting on your new TV that will tell it how to display Standard Definition material from your DVD player, and you need to adjust that. (There are also settings in the set-top DVD player that tells it what kind of signal to send based on the what kind of display it is hooked up to.)
    MtD

  • PSE 9 Slide Show pixelated

    I have created a slide show in PSE 9 with sharp JPEGs of @ 3MG each.
    When viewing the photos in full screen, they are badly pixelated.
    Any ideas?   Thanks.

    tonystef wrote:
    Still have pixelated slide show.  Repeated the process, ensuring that everystep was at max resolution.  The slide show in PSE 9 is still pixelated.  The photos in the folder they came from are sharp.
    I exported to Premiere & burned a DVD.  Pixelated on my computer as well as my near new LCD TV.
    Whats wrong with this PSE process - anyone know?
    more information may help analyze your problem
    1 -- What are the pixel dimension of the photo files that are used in this slide show ?
    2 -- Did you add Pan or zoom when making the PSE slide show ?
    3 -- When you say you exported to Premiere Elements,
    -- did you only make the DVD menus and burn the DVD disc in Premiere Elements ? OR
    -- did you also Edit the video in Premiere Elements using its Timeline or Scenes functions ?
    4 -- Are you creating the DVD as Widescreen (16:9) or as Full Screen (4:3 aspect ratio) ?
    General comments --
    Since you are creating a DVD (which is standard definition with pixel dimensions of 720 x 480 for NTSC in USA or 720 x 576 for PAL)  inputing a high pixel resolution photo file to the slide show process can actually produce a lesser quality image in the DVD video in the final image. Generally recommended are using a photo editor for  downsizing the photofile resolution to approx 1000 x 750 for 4:3 aspect ratio before you start making the slide show.   
    If you respond that you did use pan or zoom and you respond that you worked with (edited) the slide show video in Premiere Elements,
    -- then there is a Premiere Elements parameter of Scale to Framesize that may be a significant factor in why you see pixelation.
    -- Also it will be good to check the Premiere Elements project setting
    When playing a DVD on a high resolution screen (either HD TV or computer monitor) the effectiveness of the upscaling hardware or software doing the playback is a factor in the quality of image that you see. I don't suspect that this is your only problem, but it can be a factor.

  • Determining accurate pixel dimensions from screenshots

    So, this is a bit of a strange question. Essentially, the company I work for has a large social media presence and is worried about how certain images display on mobile vs desktop. There are a ton of guides out there providing the optimal image sizes, but many lack any mobile image dimensions.
    My answer was to take screenshots of each platform to determine the optimal size. However, when I use the marquee tool to measure width and height, my pixel dimensions are very different; especially the ones from my phone.
    For example, Facebook says an ideal profile picture is 160 x 160 pixels. I took a screenshot on my Macbook Pro and what I measured was 150 x 150 pixels exactly and my mobile screenshot shows 212 x 212 for the picture.
    While the aspect ratio is same (1:1), I'd just like to understand why my monitor screenshots are giving me a different number.; especially because I've been reading that ppi has no bearing on web based images anyway and that 160 pixels should display the same regardless of ppi.
    To put it simply, is there a way to accurately determine the sizes of these images via screenshots or am I shooting in the dark for a solution like this?
    Thanks in advance!

    So, this is a bit of a strange question. Essentially, the company I work for has a large social media presence and is worried about how certain images display on mobile vs desktop. There are a ton of guides out there providing the optimal image sizes, but many lack any mobile image dimensions.
    My answer was to take screenshots of each platform to determine the optimal size. However, when I use the marquee tool to measure width and height, my pixel dimensions are very different; especially the ones from my phone.
    For example, Facebook says an ideal profile picture is 160 x 160 pixels. I took a screenshot on my Macbook Pro and what I measured was 150 x 150 pixels exactly and my mobile screenshot shows 212 x 212 for the picture.
    While the aspect ratio is same (1:1), I'd just like to understand why my monitor screenshots are giving me a different number.; especially because I've been reading that ppi has no bearing on web based images anyway and that 160 pixels should display the same regardless of ppi.
    To put it simply, is there a way to accurately determine the sizes of these images via screenshots or am I shooting in the dark for a solution like this?
    Thanks in advance!

  • Pixel dimensions & document size

    Why do the pixel dimensions change the document size when the "resample image
    " box is selected?  I want the pixel size to be 2400 x 3000 and the image size to be 8 x 10in.
    Any ideas why I can't change the pixel dimensions without the system changing my document size to something other than the 8x10 that I want?  Thanks!

    Why do the pixel dimensions change the document size when the "resample image
    " box is selected?
    Because that's exactly what "resample image" means.
    I want the pixel size to be 2400 x 3000 and the image size to be 8 x 10in.Any ideas why I can't change the pixel dimensions without the system changing my document size to something other than the 8x10 that I want?
    Probably because your document is not 8x10 aspect ratio to begin with. If the photo is not 8x10 aspect ratio, then resize will not get you there (unless you want to distort your photo). You must first crop your image to 8x10 aspect ratio, and then if necessary resize.

  • Scanned handwriting in Tiff - DPI/pixel dimensions requirements for Printing

    Namaste'
    I am preparing to have a book printed of my Teacher's sayings in His own handwriting from His diaries.
    The sayings were in ballpoint pen and some 20 years old.
    We scanned them by a Greyscale hand scanner in 300dpi.
    I have since cleaned and cropped them, so the 300 dpi standard is no longer there.
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    I was told 240dpi smallest.
    What is the relation of pixel dimension to dpi? And how do I know this is enough?
    Can anyone help clear this up for me?
    When I take them down to the local printer and run them on their machine,for testing,  the images look fine.
    I am using PSCS3.
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    When I scan linework art like signatures, handwriting, pen-and-ink drawings, etc., I set the scanner for 2400 PPI at print size, 1-bit/lineart/monochromatic/bw mode (your scanner software should call it one of these, the important bit is that it is NOT greyscale mode).
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    Using a 1-bit file eliminates any soft edges as you would have with a greyscale image, and 1-bits can easily be made to have a transparent background so placing them into a layout is a piece of cake.
    My best advice to you is to detemine your output size, then re-scan at 2400 PPI at the correct size.
    To your other question, pixel dimensions refers to the actual number of pixels in the image,  and is the only true measurement of resolution for a digital image.  Until you determine the print size PPI (pixels per inch) is irrelevant, and the PPI will change based on the output size: if you have an image that is 2000 pixels wide and you  print it at 10 inches then your PPI is 200 (2000 / 10). If you output at  5 inches then the PPI is 400 (2000 / 5).
    DPI (dots per inch) refers to the resolution of an output device. The two are commonly used to mean the same thing, but they are not synonyms -- digital images contain only pixels, never dots, and printers output with dots, never pixels.

  • Pixel dimensions for iPad wallpaper

    I want to set a background wallpaper for my iPad that won't be cropped or otherwise distorted to fit the screen.  In the past all that was required was to pad an image to the appropriate proportions in photoshop, but when I created an image to be precisely the pixel dimensions of the iPad3 screen, 2048x1536, attempts to set it as wallpaper still resulted in the the wallpaper settings blowing it up. 
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    Or is there a set degree of enlargement it uses, like forcing everything to be double, that I can use to pad an image so the forced crop results in the final image being correct?
    I'm really tired of the seeing my wrecked images every time I wake  the iPad.  And no, I have no interest whatsoever in Apple's screenshots.

    Hey Donot Haveone!
    Try adjusting the following setting to see if it resolves your issue:
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    http://help.apple.com/ipad/7/#/iPad20658a2e
    You can stop the motion of some screen elements, such as the parallax effect of icons and alerts.
    Reduce motion.  Go to Settings > General > Accessibility and turn on Reduce Motion.
    Thanks for being a part of the Apple Support Communities!
    Cheers,
    Braden

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