Crop when framing is wrong
Use Image Crop when the image has extra space, a bad thumbnail frame, or needs a fixed social or ecommerce aspect ratio.
Image Category
Choose the image workflow by outcome: crop the frame, resize dimensions, compress file size, convert format, or run a guided prep flow.
Start with the change that fixes the biggest delivery problem first. Framing problems come before dimensions, dimensions usually come before compression, and format conversion is best after the image already looks right.
Use Image Crop when the image has extra space, a bad thumbnail frame, or needs a fixed social or ecommerce aspect ratio.
Use Image Resize & Convert when the image is too wide, too tall, or needs exact dimensions before upload.
Use Image Compress when the image already looks correct but the file is too large for a website, email, shop, or form.
Use Image to WebP when you mainly need a compact web format and do not need crop or resize controls.
Use Image Prep when one image needs several ordered steps: crop, resize, compress, and final export.
Image processing runs in your browser. Very large images can be slower or memory-heavy, so reduce dimensions first when possible.
A safe delivery path for most website images is crop for framing, resize to the real display size, compress for file weight, then convert format only if the destination benefits from WebP or another output.
If you are not sure where to begin, start with Image Prep because it keeps the common image delivery steps in the right order.
Draw a crop area, lock aspect ratios, and export the exact framing you need.
Resize dimensions, convert format, and export optimized outputs.
Reduce file size with adjustable quality before downloading.
Convert JPG, PNG, and other formats into efficient WebP output.