Image Resizer
Resize images to specific width/height instantly in the browser.
Drag-and-crop function using HTML5 Canvas.
Images rarely arrive in the exact framing you need. Background distractions, uneven compositions, or unused margins can dilute the message. Cropping is the simplest and most reliable way to refine visuals so they tell a clear story. The Image Cropper focuses on speed and precision: upload, select the region that matters, and export a clean result that fits your layout and goals without detours through heavyweight software.
A well‑cropped image draws attention to the subject and improves readability across cards, hero banners, product pages, and social posts. It reduces visual noise and helps interfaces feel polished. When used consistently, cropping becomes a small habit that dramatically improves overall design quality and engagement.
Professional workflows thrive on repeatable, fast adjustments. Cropping removes unnecessary elements and aligns images to design systems without complex steps. It is invaluable for product photography (centering the item), blog headers (emphasizing the focal point), and documentation (highlighting the relevant portion of a screenshot). Because the tool runs in your browser, privacy is preserved and iteration is quick—you can test several crops in minutes and publish immediately.
Consistent framing also improves performance indirectly. By reducing wasted space, you can pair cropping with resizing and compression to produce assets that load faster and look sharper at the same time. This reduces layout shifts, clarifies hierarchy, and keeps pages feeling deliberate and refined.
Provides an intuitive rectangle selection with responsive feedback so you can fine‑tune composition without guesswork. Supports common formats (JPG/PNG/WebP) and generates a new image of the selected region with clean edges. Keeps the interface minimal: upload, crop, download. This simplicity translates into reliable results during content sprints and editorial workflows where speed matters.
Yes, all operations run locally.
Resizing and JPEG/WebP compression can reduce quality.
Most re-encodes strip metadata.
No, files never leave your device.