![]() | Creating Your Own Custom Crop Tools |
Step One
Press the letter C to switch to the Crop tool, and then go under the Window menu and choose Tool Presets to bring up the Tool Presets palette (or click on it in the Palette Well on the right side of the Options Bar, where it's nested by default). You'll find five Crop tool presets are already there, all set at 300 ppi. That's great if you need these sizes at 300 ppi; but if you don't, you might as well drag these tool presets into the Trash icon at the bottom of the palette. (Also, make sure that Current Tool Only option is checked at the bottom of the palette so you'll see only the Crop tool's presets, and not the presets for every tool.)

Step Two
Go up to the Options Bar and enter the dimensions for the first tool you want to create (in this example, we'll create a Crop tool that crops to a wallet-size image). In the Width field, enter 2. Press the Tab key to jump to the Height field and enter 2.5. Note: If you have the Rulers set to Inches under the Units section in Photoshop's Units & Rulers Preferences (Command-K [PC: Control-K]), then when you press the Tab key, Photoshop will automatically insert "in" after your numbers, indicating inches.[View full size image]

Step Three
In the Tool Presets palette, click on the New Tool Preset icon at the bottom of the palette (to the left of the Trash icon). This brings up the New Tool Preset dialog, in which you can name your new preset. Name it "Crop to Wallet Size," click OK, and the new tool is added to the Tool Presets palette.[View full size image]

Step Four
Continue this process of typing in new dimensions in the Crop tool's Options Bar and clicking on the New Tool Preset icon until you've created custom Crop tools for the sizes you use most. Make the names descriptive (for example, add "Portrait" or "Landscape").


Step Five
Chances are your custom Crop tool presets won't be in the order you want them, so go under the Edit menu and choose Preset Manager. In the resulting dialog, choose Tools from the Preset Type pop-up menu, and scroll down until you see the Crop tools you created. Now just click-and-drag them to wherever you want them to appear in the list, and then click Done.

Step Six
Now you can close the Tool Presets palette because there's an easier way to access your presets: With the Crop tool selected, just click on the Crop icon on the left in the Options Bar. A pop-up menu of tools will appear. Click on a preset, drag out a cropping border, and it will be fixed to the exact dimensions you chose for that tool. Imagine how much time and effort this is going to save (really, close your eyes and imagine...mmmm...tool presets...yummy...).[View full size image]
