Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Photography
  3. Evergreens

Image Editing 101: How to crop and straighten an image in Photoshop

Add as a preferred source on Google

Adobe Photoshop is full of advanced editing tools that let you do everything from change the color of an object to remove the background from an image, but the seemingly humble crop tool is among the most important.

Photoshop offers a couple of ways to crop an image, but the crop tool offers more control, with options to straighten, set a specific aspect ratio, correct perspective distortion, and even fill in missing areas using artificial intelligence. Here’s how to get the most out of this simple yet powerful tool in the world’s favorite photo-editing program.

Recommended Videos

Cropping an image in Photoshop

Image used with permission by copyright holder

1. Select the crop tool

Click on the crop tool icon from the toolbar on the left — it looks like a square with overlapping corners — or simply press the C key to select it (this is one of Photoshop’s keyboard shortcuts that actually makes sense). Once selected, a box will show up over the photograph, with white borders at the corners and midpoints illustrating the size and shape of the crop.

2. Choose an aspect ratio (Optional)

By default, Photoshop uses the original aspect ratio of the photo (or the last aspect ratio you selected the last time you used the crop tool). If you want the photo in a specific shape, such as to print an 8×10 or to share a square photo on Instagram, you’ll want to adjust the aspect ratio.

Use the drop-down menu at the top (it says “original ratio” by default) and choose the desired ratio. For example, 1:1 (Square), or 4:5, which is the shape of an 8 x 10-inch print.

If you do not want to be locked into an aspect ratio, press the “clear” button on the top toolbar for a free-range crop tool.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

3. Resize

Grab the corners of the crop box until to selects only what you would like included in the photo. You can also click and hold in the middle of the crop box to move the crop around the photograph, changing the framing but maintaining the same overall size. When you’re done with cropping and straightening, you can resize the image the usual way.

4. Straighten (Optional)

With the crop box still active, hover the mouse pointer over the outside corner of the crop box until you see the curved, double-headed arrow. Then, click and drag to rotate the crop box in order to straighten the image. 

Alternately, you can select the straighten tool from the top menu. Then, use the tool to draw a line across something in the photo that should be straight, like the horizon. Once the line is drawn, Photoshop will automatically straighten the image.

This step is optional if your photo is already straight, but a quick and easy way to fix a crooked horizon.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

5. Lock in the crop

To finish the crop, hit the enter key. But before you do this, you may want deselect the Delete Cropped Pixels option from the top tool bar. Otherwise, once you finalized the crop, you won’t be able to go back and change it (except to make it smaller). Unlike in Lightroom, cropping in Photoshop is destructive by default, so we recommend turning Delete Cropped Pixels off unless you are absolutely sure you won’t need to make changes.

Straightening an image in Photoshop

If your photo is crooked simply because you weren’t holding the camera level, the crop tool is the best, simplest way to straighten it. But correcting for slanted lines as a result of perspective is more complex. This often happens if you took the photograph looking up at something, or from a slightly off-axis position, instead of straight on. It’s also a common issue with photos of architecture.

Fortunately, you can easily fix this by editing the image in Photoshop.

1. Select the perspective crop tool

Instead of selecting the normal crop tool from the toolbar, click and hold on the crop tool icon until the sub-menu pops up. Click on Perspective crop tool. (You can also press Shift-C to cycle through the different crop tool options.)

Image used with permission by copyright holder

2. Select the cropped area

Draw a rough box over the part of the photo that you would like to keep in the final crop.

Image used with permission by copyright holder

3. Adjust the edges

Next, drag the corners of the box so that the edges are parallel to the edges of objects in the image that should be straight. Use the gridlines to help.

Be sure to use all four corners, so that both horizontal and vertical lines match the grid.

4. Hit enter to finish

Once you are satisfied that the lines are lined up, press enter. From here, you can continue editing the image, including using the regular crop tool if you would like the image to be a specific aspect ratio.

Why crop in Photoshop?

While cropping and straightening seems like a basic procedure, Photoshop gives you options to do more than basic adjustments. Not every photo will need to be cropped and straightened, and even among those that do, only some will require the full power of Photoshop’s crop tools. If you use an image management program like Adobe Lightroom, you don’t need to open every photo in Photoshop just to crop it.

However, if you plan to edit an image in Photoshop anyway, we suggest also saving the cropping step for Photoshop. If you crop an image before opening it in Photoshop, you won’t be able to go back and change the crop — at least, not without starting your edit over from scratch.

Hillary K. Grigonis
Hillary never planned on becoming a photographer—and then she was handed a camera at her first writing job and she's been…
Google releases big v4.0 update for its popular Snapseed editing app on Android
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

After years of sitting on its hands, Google appears to have remembered it owns one of the best photo editing apps on mobile. Snapseed 4.0 is now rolling out to Android, bringing the platform up to speed after a stretch of iOS exclusivity that left Android users watching from the sidelines.

The story starts last June, when Google quietly broke Snapseed out of its long dormancy with a significant 3.0 update for iPhone. It was a surprise move that suggested the company was serious about the app again. Google then confirmed at the start of this year that Android wouldn't be left behind for long, and true to that word, the Play Store listing has now been updated to reflect version 4.0 — skipping straight past 3.0 for Android users and landing both platforms on the same version simultaneously.

Read more
Google Photos gets new editing tools that are all about subtle touch-ups
Google Photos just made your camera roll feel like it came with a makeup artist included, and the results are refreshingly understated.
Google Photos Touch Up feature in action.

Whether it is dark circles from a late night of work, a blemish that showed up uninvited, or something similar that could use additional brightness, Google Photos now has you covered.

Google has officially rolled out a new Touch Up suite inside its Photos app editor, integrating face retouching tools directly into the app for the first time. Previously, such adjustments were only available inside Google’s Camera app at the time of capture. 

Read more
Adobe Firefly AI will let you edit in creative software by just talking your way through it
Adobe's new AI Assistant can now run your entire creative workflow. Yes, all of it.
Adobe Firefly logo on dark background

Adobe has quietly been building something big inside Firefly, its all-in-one creative AI studio. And today, the company is ready to show it off.

Meet Firefly AI Assistant, a conversational tool that lets you describe what you want to create and then handles the execution across Adobe's entire app ecosystem, including Photoshop, Premiere, Lightroom, Express, and Illustrator. 

Read more