Cropping Photos
After you've sorted your images in the Adobe Bridge, one of the first editing tasks you'll probably undertake is cropping a photo. There are a number of different ways to crop a photo in Photoshop CS2. We'll start with the basic garden-variety options, and then we'll look at some ways to make the task faster and easier.
Step One
Press the letter C to get the Crop tool (you could always select it directly from the Toolbox, but I only recommend doing so if you're charging by the hour).

Step Two
Click within your photo and drag out a cropping border. The area to be cropped away will appear dimmed (shaded). You don't have to worry about getting your crop border right when you first drag it out, because you can edit the border by clicking-and-dragging the points that appear in each corner and at the center of each side.

TIPIf you don't like seeing your photo with the cropped-away areas appearing shaded (as in the previous step), you can toggle this shading feature off/on by pressing the Backslash key on your keyboard. When you press the Backslash key, the border remains in place, but the shading is turned off.[View full size image]

Step Three
While you have the crop border in place, rotate it by moving your cursor outside the border (when you do, the cursor will change into a double-headed arrow). Just click-and-drag and the cropping border will rotate in the direction you choose (this is a great way to save time if you have a crooked image, because it lets you crop and rotate at the same time).[View full size image]

Step Four
After you have the cropping border where you want it, just press the Return (PC: Enter) key to crop your image.[View full size image]

