Crop Image to 1:2 Aspect Ratio

Private browser editing, your images stay on your device.

Controls

Crop one or more images to a locked 1:2 tall portrait ratio for phone screens, story graphics, and vertical banners. Upload a batch, set the tall crop, and download all results.

How to Crop to 1:2

  1. Upload one or more images
  2. Adjust the crop box locked to 1:2
  3. Download one cropped image or the whole batch all at once

Key Features

Batch Ratio Locking

Use preset ratios like 1:1, 4:3, 16:9, and 3:2, or enter a custom ratio, then bulk crop multiple images to that ratio all at once.

Locked Ratio Cropping

Keep the crop box locked to the chosen ratio while you resize and reposition it.

Print Ready Ratios

Use print-friendly ratios such as 3:2, 7:5, and 5:4 for common photo sizes.

Instant Results

Cropping runs in your browser so results are instant and your image stays on your device.

Frequently Asked Questions

Upload one or more images, and the crop box will stay locked to 1:2 (1000:2000) while you move, resize, rotate, or zoom the image. This makes it easy to crop photos for the exact ratio you need and then download one cropped result or the full batch at once.

An aspect ratio is the proportional relationship between the width and height of an image. For example, 16:9 means the image is 16 units wide for every 9 units high, while 1:1 means the image is square. When you crop to an aspect ratio, you are changing the shape of the image frame, not automatically changing the pixel quality of the area you keep.

Aspect ratio describes the shape of the image, while image size describes the actual pixel dimensions. For example, 1600x900 and 1920x1080 are both 16:9 images because they share the same shape, even though the pixel size is different. A common workflow is to crop to the correct aspect ratio first and then resize to the exact dimensions required by a website or platform.

Yes. This aspect ratio cropper supports batch cropping, so you can upload multiple images and apply the same ratio across the whole set. If Lock cropper stays on, you can reuse one crop setup across the batch, which is helpful for product photos, listing images, thumbnails, and social media content that needs a consistent layout.

Yes. Turn off Lock cropper if you want each image to keep its own crop position while you move through the list. That is useful when the photos have different compositions and a single crop area would cut off important details. You still keep the chosen aspect ratio, but each file can be adjusted individually.

The best aspect ratio depends on where the image will be published. Common choices are 1:1 for square posts, 4:5 for taller Instagram feed posts, 9:16 for stories, reels, and short vertical video covers, and 16:9 for YouTube thumbnails, presentations, and widescreen graphics. Choosing the correct aspect ratio before uploading helps your images display cleanly without awkward automatic cropping.

For print, it is best to match the crop to the final paper size before downloading. A 3:2 ratio is commonly used for 4x6 prints, 7:5 works well for 5x7 prints, and 5:4 matches 8x10 prints. Cropping to the print ratio in advance helps protect important edges so nothing important gets trimmed later during printing.

Cropping does not reduce the quality of the pixels that remain inside the crop area. It simply removes the outer parts of the image you do not want to keep. Quality changes usually happen later if you heavily resize or recompress the file, so cropping to the right ratio first is often the cleanest way to keep your image looking sharp.

This preset page keeps the crop locked to 1:2 so you can work faster with that ratio. If you need a custom aspect ratio, open the main aspect ratio crop page where you can type your own width and height values and lock the crop box to that custom shape.

The tool supports common image formats including JPG, PNG, GIF, BMP, and WEBP. You can upload one image or a full batch, crop them to a fixed or custom aspect ratio, and then download the results directly in your browser. That makes the tool useful for both everyday photo edits and larger repeat workflows.

This tool is designed for browser based editing, so the cropping workflow runs directly in your browser. That is useful for speed, privacy, and convenience because you can crop images, preview the result, and download the output without relying on a more complicated desktop editor for routine aspect ratio adjustments.