You are here: Home | Forum | Cutting a 10x8 image from larger picture
You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most of the discussions, articles and other free features. By joining our Virgin Media community you will have full access to all discussions, be able to view and post threads, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own images/photos, and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please join our community today.
I'm relatively new to this photography stuff and was wondering what's the best way of cutting a 10x8 section from a larger image as if I crop the image or resize it becomes distorted.
The Image editors at my disposal are Paint Shop Pro Ultimate 2022 and the latest version of Gimp.
I only use photoshop but the main thing is to crop to the correct aspect ratio you are printing to. In your case 5:4. Then print to that size. If you don’t crop to the right ratio then it’ll be distorted or won’t fit the frame.
What is the original photo ratio to start with? Usually you select the image and you get the marquee then around the whole photo. You then hold down shift and resize the marquee keeping the aspect ratio, the you crop what you need within that marquee.
I have a much older version of PSP, but when you use the crop tool, it shows the aspect ratio in the bottom left corner. So drag the corner of the crop until it's both the section that you want and the correct aspect ratio.
I'm relatively new to this photography stuff and was wondering what's the best way of cutting a 10x8 section from a larger image as if I crop the image or resize it becomes distorted.
The Image editors at my disposal are Paint Shop Pro Ultimate 2022 and the latest version of Gimp.
Thanks.
Hi
You should be able to perform that using a free windows program called irfanview.
It's a great little all rounder that incorporates an image viewer, editor, organiser and converter program. You can also add text and shapes to images. It also plays music and video files. https://www.irfanview.com/
Yeah, resizing can totally mess with the quality of the image. What I usually do is use the "select" tool to outline the part I want, copy it, and then paste it into a new file. That way, I keep the original image unchanged.