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October 7, 2008 4:44 PM PDT

Quick crops and image resizing

by Peter Butler
IrfanView

IrfanView packs some mighty editing features in its tiny download.

(Credit: CNET Networks)

For making color corrections, printing, managing photo albums, or any of 100 other routine image-editing tasks associated with digital photography, commercial programs like Adobe Photoshop or Corel Paint Shop Pro are great solutions. But if you just need to resize and crop your personalized South Park character image to fit on your Facebook or MySpace page, a simpler option is in order.

Luckily, there are a variety of free and easy ways to crop and resize your digital photographs. One of the quickest and easy downloads for doing so is IrfanView, a longtime favorite image viewer that has added more and more editing functionality through the years.

The tiny download weighs in at 1.24MB and literally can be installed in seconds. Once you've got it running, open the image that you want to edit and select Image > Resize/Resample to edit the size of your photo. To crop, click your cursor in the top left corner of the area you want to crop, then drag the cursor to create a rectangle. Select Edit > Crop Selection, and voila!

Another free application I've become a big fan of recently is Resizr, created by Matt Miller back in 2006. Resizr is a free online tool that lets you upload an image from your hard drive or via a URL. You can then rotate, crop, and resize your image, as well as make edits to brightness and contrast. I was impressed to recently discover that I could even adjust levels and convert PNG files to JPEGs.

resizr

Resizr's space interface holds several quick and valuable options for editing images.

(Credit: CNET Networks/CBS)

What do you use to quickly resize and crop digital images? Tell me about it in the comments.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) Showing 1 of 3 pages (69 Comments)
by malmedia October 7, 2008 7:36 PM PDT
irfanview all the way. Quick, easy, and lots of options and features.
Reply to this comment
by ben_myers October 7, 2008 7:42 PM PDT
Irfanview is super for quick cropping and resizing. I use it all the time to create top-notch photos of items I list on eBay, and the great photos sell the stuff for me. Why use anything else?
Reply to this comment
by lostempire October 7, 2008 7:50 PM PDT
microsoft Photo editor ftw. 1.7mb in size, does not need to be 'installed' it just runs. I have ripped it off my office CD and it stays on my memory stick.
it's has simple features which is what i want, not bloaty and easy to use
Reply to this comment
by MarkDanielMiller October 7, 2008 8:13 PM PDT
I do love InfranView - but before I found it, I found a sweet little app by "FastStone" for batch resizing (http://twurl.nl/rxyyhw) It's truly amazing, and best of all, is freeware. If you search Download.com for "faststone" you'll also find a flurry of other amazing little apps they've created. Check 'em out! :)
Reply to this comment
by schwaber October 7, 2008 8:41 PM PDT
Right on. I tried Irfanview and the moment I found Faststone's Image Viewer, off the hard drive went Irfan.
by seadog75 October 7, 2008 8:17 PM PDT
I am a longtime user of Thumbs Plus by Cerious software. Great program, lots of features to manage and alter photos. Easy interface, intuitive, and lots of controls for color adjustment, easy cropping tools, and a comprehensive photo/image organizer that also allows you to create photo web pages, contact sheets, and manage photo containers both on and offline. Great for lots of images that you might store on CDROM, Thumbs makes a searchable thumbnail databases of offline image volumes. Powerful package for a reasonable price.
Reply to this comment
by affinious October 7, 2008 8:17 PM PDT
XnView is my favorite free app for viewing, scanning, scaling, cropping and lossless rotation of images.
Reply to this comment
by MarkDanielMiller October 7, 2008 8:22 PM PDT
I do love InfranView - but before I found it, I found a sweet little app by "FastStone" for batch resizing (http://twurl.nl/rxyyhw) It's truly amazing, and best of all, is freeware. If you search Download.com for "faststone" you'll also find a flurry of other amazing little apps they've created. Check 'em out! :)

Also - check this fancy new onine image editing tool at http://www.picnik.com. Make sure to check out the "Create" tab. There are some AMAZING photo filters which up to now have really only been available in Photoshop - and that required pretty decent PS knowledge. :)
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by johnsonr October 7, 2008 8:26 PM PDT
My favorite quick and free image utility is the ever evolving FastStone Image Viewer. It's very effective at image management with super easy to use individual and bulk image resizing and naming. It's also very good for quick crops and image appearance tweaks. it's frequently updated and just gets more and more useful.
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by Josan11 October 8, 2008 10:55 AM PDT
I totally agree about Fastone. I've used it for years and it's one of my fav apps. It will be installed on any OS I ever use!

John
by October 7, 2008 8:39 PM PDT
1. Irfanview, oh so powerful. Also use it to create slideshows, even of image sequences playing back as an animation, e.g. 20 frames per second, and also with mp3 files in between, to add audio tracks to the slideshow. And then save as screensaver too. Awesome.

I've been using Irfanview since 1997. Oh and let be recommend to anyone that even though it's freeware for home use, please please do the right thing and send Irfan Skiljan a small donation. $10 or so, it's nothing. And yet it's immense.

2. Project Dogwaffle free version - here at download.com too, if you didn't notice. The resampling is very good quality, I'm told, even some hard-core users of Photoshop have told me they liked the visual result of PD's sampling better than that of PS.

3. ArtWeaver

4. MS Paint - I only recently discovered that in MS Paint, when you have a selection, you can save with a transparent color (I think if it's white background it makes that the transparent pixels in alpha, something like that. Anyway, very useful for some compositing jobs)

5. PD Artist - keep an eye on GAOTD (GiveAwayOfTheDay) for a free offer to PD Artist.

-Philip
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by schwaber October 7, 2008 8:44 PM PDT
All this simple resize and print stuff is fine as far as it goes, but I am looking for a program (freeware, if possible) that allows me to remove objects from a photo (like a stop sign in front of what I was really shooting) that is easier to use than Photoshop; I would like to, say, remove that stop sign in less than two hours of playing around with the program. Anyone know of such a program?

Thanks.

sas
Reply to this comment
by BrianZachary October 8, 2008 12:36 AM PDT
It's funny you should be looking for such a program. I'm afraid you are a day late to get it for free, but yesterday's free Giveaway of the Day at http://www.giveawayoftheday.com/ was called Inpaint, which does exactrly what you are looking for. Like I said, the program isn't free anymore, but you can still check out the program publisher's site at http://www.teorex.com/inpaint.html I think it's $30 regular price, but they seem to have a free demo version.

You should be able to do a search to find something similar, even freeware. Try searching for Inpaint, Teorex, or something similar and check out accompanying results that show. Hope this helps.
by Microwave October 8, 2008 4:51 PM PDT
A program called inpaint is a decent app that works good 4me.this is a site where you can get trial version,BTW I have seen it 4free B4 but cant remember where .....try google....good luck.
I have used infranview a long time ago but have many other lite apps that worj much better 4me,for simple stuff as was said Fastone in nice....and best of all its FREE.

http://www.softpedia.com/get/Multimedia/Graphic/Graphic-Editors/Inpaint.shtml
by petweis October 7, 2008 8:46 PM PDT
Hi,
there is a free Photo Manager by Magix at this URL - http://www.magix.com/us/free-downloads/free-software/photo-manager/

which I value highly for its unique (as far as I know) ability to straighten out photos without losing a single pixel. All the other photo editors and managers - if they have an "any angle" feature at all - simply tilt the photo in a vertical rectangular frame, and you have to trim off the resulting black long triangles from each edge. Depending on the tilt, you lose a fair bit of the picture.

The Magix Photo Manager rearranges the whole picture to any angle of your choice. You just draw a slanting line anywhere in the photo according to the tilt of the photo, and the photo Manager takes that as the new horizontal axis and rearranges the whole photo correctly and perfectly - as if by Magic.

This is invaluable for me as I have a tendency to tilt the camera a bit when pushing down the shutter button. It is also invaluable in my work a in maintaining a couple of web site for 2 Real Estate agents who send me pictures of their listings, including many pictures for a slide show of the interiors. And many of these pictures are tilted for the same reason. It's a life saver to be able to straighten out the pictures without losing anything.

This program has several other good features. It's layout is a bit different from the usual, but after a bit of hunting around and getting used to it, one can access things easily. The only feature I do not like is that the photos in a folder are not listed by name, but only shown as thumbnails under the working window. This necessitates much close peering at little thumbnails to find a particular picture in a folder. At least, I have not discovered yet if there is a listing by name. And so far I have been too pressed for time to see if there is such a listing. Best regards, Peter;
Reply to this comment
by markkino October 7, 2008 8:54 PM PDT
I use VuePrint (http://hamrick.com/) for all my resizing and cropping. It is very easy to use and so fast. Use the mouse to select the area you want. It automatically crops it. Press V to save the image.
To resize, press Z and you can enter pixel size or size in inches.

I purchased this almost 10 years ago I think - I've tried other viewers - but none have been so fast and easy to use. Slideshows, thumbnails for "contact sheets". Really quick simple photo functions such as brightening, cropping, resizing, rotating, pasting a "PrintScreen" and editing it for use in a word processor, etc... I love the fact you can go full screen and have a slide show on the full screen.
There are no stupid icons. Menu or keyboard driven. And did I say fast!
Now you buy VueScan (it works with most scanners) and Vueprint is included.
Reply to this comment
by kelron October 7, 2008 9:23 PM PDT
After I installed MS Office 2007 I found that photos opened in "MS Office Picture Manager". Before racing off to re-associate pictures with Photoshop Elements, I had a look at it and found that it is quite a reasonable app for re-sizing etc. The cropping tool can be very helpful with its readout of the dimensions on the right pane showing when the correct numbers are arrived at. Brightness/contrast and red-eye removal editing is also fine for most quick scanning and printing jobs. So if you already have Office 2007, check it out, it does the job.
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by mans nijenhuis October 8, 2008 11:47 AM PDT
I agree, the Office suite has al lot more to offer then most users think. Office Picture Manager does the job very well and the good thing about it is that you can upgrade a complete folder with photos with out having to save all the different files.Another good application in the Office Suite is Publisher. This application is easy to use and creates fine newsletters, webpages or preview photo files.
Office picture manager is also included in MS office 2003.
by escartist October 7, 2008 9:26 PM PDT
I use a nice resizing program called VSO Resizer. I have had noting but nice things to say about this product and it also freeware.
Reply to this comment
by knight38 October 7, 2008 10:00 PM PDT
For photo editing, I have used Logitech's FotoTouch Color since acquiring my first Windows 95 computer in 1996. It was originally designed for Windows 3.1, worked with Windows 98, and still works with Windows XP, although it crashes with some more recent jpeg files. It works with my new printer, but not with my flatbed scanner. In spite of those shortcomings, it is still the easiest to use of all the free and low-cost editing programs I have tried. It has the same deskew function as the Magix Photo Manager described above, and its ability to clone and resize selected portions of an image (using copy and paste) is simplicity itself. It will read and save jpeg, bmp, and tiff files, and convert from one to the other. Unfortunately, it is no longer available, and people at Logitech seem to never have heard of it.
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by TheLastPro October 7, 2008 10:01 PM PDT
GIMP is a GREAT image editing program. Almost as good as fireworks

AND ITS FREE!!!
Reply to this comment
by Basuto9 October 7, 2008 10:12 PM PDT
For quick crops, I just use Windows Photo Gallery that comes with Vista.- click on "fix", then "crop picture". Very simple. Only works with jpg.s, but easy to convert. Open as "Paint", click "copy" and "Save as type: jpg. (or jpeg.). No muss, no fuss, no going to other programs and setting things up. It also has several other adjustments in "fix" that work well for regular digital photos, as far as normal viewing; not for professionals, of course.
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by Tburg2 October 7, 2008 10:51 PM PDT
I like ACDSee for cropping and color correction
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by wilswong October 7, 2008 10:57 PM PDT
i used the Windows XP powertoy's photo resizer. No matter what was said about redmond, there are some small little programs that one can just call out by right clicking one or many instances of images and resize.

Find it super useful and I do not need to install another program just doing a simple resize.
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by goldgraham October 8, 2008 12:29 AM PDT
For simply preparing photos - shape and file size - Powertoys is excellent. Unfortunately Microsoft forgot to include it in Vista. I'm using VSO resizer.
by stephen7144 October 8, 2008 10:17 PM PDT
The Windows XP powertoys were great extra, one more thing lost when 'downgrading' to Vista Ultimate. However, if you check the user groups at Microsoft, you can be led to several free resizers for Vista that are free and work the same as the previous powertoy resizer. If you can spend a few dollars on a program, ACDSee at about $30-40 is a great program for viewing, cataloging, organizing, backing up, resizing, editing to a greater degree with each version. It even gives you an almost instant view of any picture and when the full viewer part of the program is open, you can get a resizable window in the left lower corner by default, that shows a decent size view of any thumbnail clicked on. It's an instant view and prevents opening full size views unless necessary, a great time saver. It's a very similar view to the Kodak Imaging program that Microsoft took away when we 'upgraded' to XP. If you have any use at all for a more complete photo editing program, you can not beat Paint Shop Pro Photo. On sale it's often about $59.00 and, although I have Photoshop CS3 installed, I much prefer Paint Shop Pro Photo. There's nothing it can't do easier, quicker and for a lot less money than Photoshop.
by sjrhj5 October 7, 2008 11:04 PM PDT
Does anyone have a good program for free-hand outlining an object and then cutting it out? The old Microsoft Photo used to do this (years ago, and now not supported). Photoshop does it, but it's a pain. Anything easy/cheap out there?
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by Microwave October 8, 2008 4:52 PM PDT
INPAINT is one of many.
by oldwellsey November 16, 2008 11:22 PM PST
Hi,
Try American Systems Print Screen Deluxe. My 1999 Version did all that you say you would like to do. I have just checked their website, and the new Version 7 is USD 19.95 + an extra 15.00 if you want it on CD. It still has all those features.
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