Use our photo size editor to quickly resize a photo for Facebook, a profile image for LinkedIn, a banner for Twitter, or a thumbnail for YouTube. You can even resize a screenshot or shrink a hi-res photo to help your blog or web page load faster.
Resizing your image for a bigger project? Unleash your creativity by exploring the photo editing capabilities and design tools from Adobe Express. Remove the background of your image to highlight the subject, apply filters, or add GIFs and animation for a dynamic design. There are countless ways to create a compelling image for any printed or digital format.
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Adobe Express makes image resizing a breeze. Start by uploading any image in JPG or PNG format, then select the destination to choose the size you need. Apart from the standard aspect-ratio presets, the image resize tool also includes presets for all social media channels like Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, Pinterest, and more. You can also scale and pan your image to include the areas you want, then crop out the rest. When done, instantly download your resized image.
I am a complete Newbie to Affinity, I have it on trial as I am thinking of moving from Photoshop which I have used for a number of years, I am struggling with a couple of things with Affinity, I will probably get my head around most of them but Resizing the image has me completely baffled. I am using a desktop Mac and want to resize my original image to a much smaller image (something like 100mm on the long side) while maintaining the resolution and aspect ratio, I suspect that there is an easy way to do this and once someone out there tells me how, I will feel like a complete dipstick, but at the moment it has me baffled, please help!
To resize your image use Document > Resize Document. Enter your required dimension (such as 100mm) and leave the other boxes. (By default, the aspect ratio and resolution/dpi will be unchanged). Click on OK. You might like to experiment with the resampling algorithm. The best one will depend on your type of image.
many thanks for your suggestion, however after trying it, which I had tried before the resolution of the reduced image is unusable, any ideas what I am doing wrong, the original image is 15.9mb so I do not understand why it will not reduce in size while maintaining quality, it works in photoshop ?
Paul467, Have you tried the different resampling algorithms? Depending on whether you have a simple diagram (use nearest neighbour) or a complex photo (use Lanczos 3) the algorithm can make a big difference. See the Affinity video tutorial here.
I have searched the forum for this question, but have not been able to figure out from the answers. I want to prepare an existing photo with 300dpi for printing and reduce it to 20x15 cm (not in pixels but in cm) for example...how do I do that in Affinity Photo? I work mainly in Affinity Designer for iPad and don't know AP so well...thanks! I attach a photo from Gimp that shows what I mean...the resolution is adjustable after the "resize print" step
Hello, thank you! I just realized that I posted my question in March in the wrong forum, I use AP for iPad...there the menu looks different and I can only resize the whole document. Also, it always jumps back from cm to pixels....but anyhow I found a workaround in March - I do it on desktop using Gimp (which is annoying but at least it works;-).
Hello, I've developed a "work-attendance based on posting picture" Application in App Inventor using camera component, and still improving it. after 3 months of "no updating", then I'm trying to made some improvement in other features. as it turns out I've got the problem with "work-attendance" feature, which before updating the photo could resize and the format was .jpg, but after updating now the photo couldn't resize and the format was .png, and comes out with notification "Sorry, File To Resize must be JPG". I'm using TaifunImage and SimpleBase64. Is there any solution for my problem? Please Help. Thanks!
I have noticed that when I export and resize images in DPP, they do not look as good as when I view the original raw in DPP. I have heard it said that "well, you're not comparing the images at 100% - if you look at the raw image at 100% and an un-resized exported jpg at 100%, they'll look the same."
Below is a photoshop-composited image comparison. I would have expected these two images to look basically identical, but the one of the left is clearly more crisp than the one on the right - seen best in her hair, eyes, mouth and the detail on the ball. (yes, i know the images aren't exactly the same size - but I don't think that should be a significant factor here - and it always looks the same no matter how I scale the window in DPP). This bothers me a great deal.
I wouldn't expect the camera/lens to matter, however. The issue really isn't how good the photos look, it's simply that the output doesn't look as good (or actually, that the output is noticeably different at all - I kind of expect WYSIWYG from a quality photo-editor). Is there some way this factors in - beyond simply how DPP applies the camera's 'picture style' settings to the raw by default? I think I would be disappointed if it did...
I'm been shooting RAW and converting the RAW files to JPEG for nine years, using a succession of Canon cameras. I've used DPP as my primary photo editor for that whole time, and I've never seen a significant degradation from RAW to JPEG, as long as I keep the resolution high and the JPEG quality at 8 or better. (As a practical matter, I always use 10 unless I'm dumbing the image down to meet a file size limit, but it would be a challenge to see the difference between 8 and 10.) I have 11 pictures hanging in our office area. All were edited and converted with DPP, then commercially printed ad framed; and all of them look great.
I'm not a pro, and I've only been shooting seriously for about 8 years. I've used DPP that entire time as well, and I'm fairly sure this issue is a recent development. I say "fairly" sure, because it's possible that inexperience caused me to "miss" it for a while, but it seems unlikely that I'd have missed it for this long. I've pulled up older photos, and they do seem sharper.
While I was testing out stuff.
I was wondering if there was an option to resize images with the same proportion.
I guess not.
This should be a nice feature.
Since alot of our mockups are haveing specific symbols that are resize to fit in.
Not handy if you need a calculator to do it
I wanted to resize images to make them small enough so that 4 images will all appear in a row but when I go into the editor, double click on an image and drag so that each image is small enough to all fit in a row, once I close the editor it appears as if nothing changed at all (aka original size). Can anyone help me?
You can easily resize your image using Quick Actions and instantly download it to your device, or use it in another Adobe Express design. Discover how to turn your resized image into a beautiful design.
The images I am getting back from the photo library and camera are HUGE, and it takes a significant amount of time to send them over the network even in good conditions. I can't imagine a scenario in which I would need the full double-digit MB image, but maybe I'm missing something? Is it common practice to resize them before sending them over the network?
As observed, by the default images from the camera are very large so that they can be displayed on large screens, printed to posters, zoomed and cropped etc without appearing unduly pixelated. So unless the app in question is a photo/image manipulating app, then resizing will almost certainly be beneficial in that it can improve networking, the app's memory foot-print and it's overall snappiness.
To put it simply, BeFunky makes photo editing easy. With our world famous Photo Editor, you can turn photos you like into photos you love! From essential editing tools such as crop, resize, and exposure to our more unique effects like Cartoonizer, Digital Art, and Enhance DLX, it's beyond easy to create great looking photos. Add a little extra flair to your image with hundreds of customizable vector icons and graphic overlays. If picture quotes are your thing, BeFunky's Photo Editor has hundreds of free fonts for you to choose from. Finally, a photo editor that's powerful, fun, AND easy to use!
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You can have your repeater rows dynamically resize to the size of your image by placing your images in dynamic panel states and having your repeater rows load in the different states. To do this, you would create a dynamic panel that uses Fit To Content styling. You would want to place an image widget in each panel state, and then import the varying images into the different states.
I am actually not trying to resize the dynamic panel because i want the overflow of the image to be scrollable. Furthermore, i just want the image to be resized base on the actual image size (because the image is a very long image and the image height varies a lot from one to the other while using repeater). However, I need the width of the image to fit the screen as well.
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