Clip and crop multiple images at once with custom dimensions and aspect ratios for consistent image sizing.
About Bulk Image Clipping
Clip and crop multiple images simultaneously with precise control over dimensions, aspect ratios, and alignment. Perfect for creating consistent image sizes across photo collections, social media content, product catalogs, and web galleries.
How to Clip Multiple Images at Once
Click "Upload Images" and select multiple images at once
Choose a clipping mode:
Aspect Ratio: Clip to specific aspect ratio (1:1, 4:3, 16:9, etc.)
Fixed Dimensions: Set exact pixel width and height
Percentage: Clip to percentage of original size (10-100%)
Click "Clip All Images" to process the entire batch
Download individual images or all as a ZIP file
Best Uses for Bulk Image Clipping
Creating consistent social media post dimensions
Preparing product photos for e-commerce sites
Making square thumbnails from rectangular photos
Standardizing photo sizes for web galleries
Creating profile pictures or avatars from photos
Cropping event photos to consistent dimensions
Preparing images for print layouts
Batch processing real estate listing photos
Creating Instagram-ready square images
Standardizing banner or header images
Understanding Clip Modes
Different clipping modes serve different purposes:
Aspect Ratio: Maintains specific width-to-height proportions. The tool clips the maximum area possible while preserving the chosen ratio. Perfect for social media (1:1 Instagram, 16:9 YouTube), print (4:3 standard, 3:2 classic), and cinematic formats (21:9 ultrawide).
Fixed Dimensions: Clips all images to exact pixel dimensions. Images smaller than specified dimensions won't be enlarged - they'll maintain their original size. Great for ensuring images meet specific platform requirements or design specs.
Percentage: Clips to a percentage of each image's original size. A 50% clip on a 1000x800px image results in 500x400px. Useful for removing edges/borders or creating zoomed-in effects while maintaining relative proportions.
Center Square: Automatically creates square images by taking the largest square from the center. Perfect for profile pictures, thumbnails, and grid layouts. No configuration needed.
Custom: Define your own ratio for specialized needs. Enter width and height values (e.g., 5:7 for prints).
Alignment Options
Control which part of the image is preserved when clipping:
Center: Keeps the middle of the image. Best for subjects centered in the frame. Default and most common choice.
Top: Preserves the top portion. Good for landscapes with important sky details or headshots.
Bottom: Keeps the bottom area. Useful for images with important foreground elements or text at the bottom.
Left/Right: Preserves left or right side. Helpful for horizontal panoramas or side-oriented subjects.
Corners (Top-Left, etc.): Keeps specific corner regions. Useful for images with subjects positioned in corners or for consistent logo/watermark placement.
Social Media Image Sizes
Quick reference for common platform requirements:
Instagram Post: 1:1 square (1080x1080px) or 4:5 portrait
Instagram Story: 9:16 portrait (1080x1920px)
Facebook Post: 4:3 or 16:9 (1200x630px recommended)
Twitter Post: 16:9 (1200x675px) or 2:1
LinkedIn Post: 1.91:1 (1200x627px)
YouTube Thumbnail: 16:9 (1280x720px minimum)
TikTok: 9:16 portrait (1080x1920px)
Pinterest Pin: 2:3 portrait (1000x1500px)
Clipping vs Resizing vs Cropping
Clipping (this tool): Selects a specific region of the image and discards the rest. Changes both dimensions and content by removing edges. Original pixel quality preserved in kept area.
Resizing: Changes overall image dimensions by scaling up or down. All content preserved but pixel data resampled. May affect quality.
Cropping: Often used interchangeably with clipping. Both remove unwanted edges. Cropping typically implies manual selection, while clipping can be automated.
💡 Pro Tips
• Use Center alignment for portraits and subjects in the middle of the frame
• Choose Center Square mode for quick profile picture creation
• Test settings on one image before batch processing large sets
• For social media, use standard aspect ratios (1:1, 16:9, 9:16)