Crop tool
Crop the document with aspect-ratio presets, free-form drag, or numerical input. Crop is non-destructive until you apply it.
The crop tool (C) trims the document boundary. Layers outside the cropped area are clipped — their data is preserved on disk so you can re-open the project and re-crop, but they don't render.
#Workflow
- Press
Cor pick the crop tool from the rail. - Drag a region on the canvas. Or pick an aspect-ratio preset from the right panel.
- Tweak the box — drag handles, drag the inside to reposition, or punch in numerical width / height / x / y.
- Hit Apply (or
Enter). The document boundary updates and all layers are remapped to the new origin. - To cancel without committing, press
Esc.
#Aspect-ratio presets
The right panel ships with common ratios:
- Free — no constraint
- Square (1:1) — IG square
- 3:4 / 4:3 / 9:16 / 16:9 — portrait / landscape / story / video
- Custom — type your own
w:h
When a ratio is locked, dragging any handle keeps the ratio stable.
#Pending vs. active crop
Internally there are two states:
pendingCrop— the live drag box you're seeing. It only exists while you're inside the crop tool.crop+cropEnabled— the committed crop, applied by Apply.
Switching tools without applying discards the pending crop. Saving the project preserves the active crop (the document remembers its current boundary).
#Re-crop later
Because crop is non-destructive on layer geometry — the editor remaps layer positions to the new origin but doesn't crop the layer pixels themselves — you can always:
- Re-enter the crop tool and drag a different region
- (planned) "Reveal hidden" — extend the canvas back to the original bounds
This is why a tightly-cropped .img is still a perfect creative master — nothing is destroyed.
#Tips
- Crop the canvas, not the layer. To crop a single image, place it on the canvas and use the layer's frame-clip (in the asset edit sheet) instead. The crop tool changes the document size.
- Resize ≠ crop. Use canvas-size (in the file menu / settings modal) to change document dimensions while preserving all layer data; use crop to remove area.