Cropping images - pasting to new layer - layer boundary size - Printable Version +- Gimp-Forum.net (https://www.gimp-forum.net) +-- Forum: GIMP (https://www.gimp-forum.net/Forum-GIMP) +--- Forum: General questions (https://www.gimp-forum.net/Forum-General-questions) +--- Thread: Cropping images - pasting to new layer - layer boundary size (/Thread-Cropping-images-pasting-to-new-layer-layer-boundary-size) |
Cropping images - pasting to new layer - layer boundary size - peterpil19 - 03-13-2017 Hi, First post on this forum. I enjoy using GIMP. I have a question about cropping and pasting as new layer. When cropping a select part of an image using the fuzzy select tool and pasting it into a new layer, the layer boundary exceeds the cropped image size - there is typically extra vertical space around the top and bottom of the cropped image. This makes resizing particularly difficult because I cannot compare the actual size of the cropped image to that of other layers pasted into the image because of the extra space. I can confirm that nothing else has been selected below the cropped image. I use GIMP to crop photos of coins. So I crop and paste side A of the coin. I then crop and paste side B as a new layer. However GIMP adds extra space around the image which makes resizing side B really hard. It would otherwise be as simple as resizing the layer/image of side B to match side A. Any help would be appreciated as have not been able to work out why this is happening. Peter RE: Cropping images - pasting to new layer - layer boundary size - Blighty - 03-13-2017 You first crop side A of the coin. What is the size of the image (in pixels) of the cropped image? You can see this in the title bar - the top left corner of Gimp. You then crop side B of the coin. What is the size of this image in pixels? RE: Cropping images - pasting to new layer - layer boundary size - peterpil19 - 03-13-2017 (03-13-2017, 06:41 AM)Blighty Wrote: You first crop side A of the coin. Hi, When I crop, I paste the image as a new layer. I then resize the layer of e.g. Side B to match Side A. This means that if the layer boundary exceeds the image boundary significantly it makes resizing more difficult - I cannot apply the image pixel height to a layer which has added additional vertical space. it is comparing apples with bananas. Also, the vertical space added is inconsistent from one cropped image to another meaning I cannot use the layer height of one image as reference for resizing the other. I guess my question would be - how do I paste a cropped image into a new layer, and force that new layer's boundaries to align with the cropped image's boundaries. The extra space is unhelpful. I don't want extra space around the image when pasting it into a layer. Also, the option to resize the layer boundary is very manual - there is no option to "snap" the layer boundary to the dimensions of the image within. Thanks Peter RE: Cropping images - pasting to new layer - layer boundary size - Blighty - 03-13-2017 I am not fully understanding your workflow. When you say you paste as a new layer are pasting as a new layer in the same image or pasting into a different image? But here is something you can try. Look at your image dimensions - in the title bar, top left corner. Now paste your new layer. Now you can do: Layer > Scale Layer... and enter the dimensions of the image. If you want to do the manual method, you can do: View > Snap to Canvas Edges RE: Cropping images - pasting to new layer - layer boundary size - rich2005 - 03-13-2017 Not too sure about your selection method but it seems to be something like this A new layer (red) pasted in but coin needs to be same size as base layer. screenshot(s) http://i.imgur.com/rltGQzm.jpg Layer is scaled to size but layer boundary (yellow dotted boundary) is now larger than the canvas size. http://i.imgur.com/I6CxcDQ.jpg Use layer to image size crops the layer to the canvas size http://i.imgur.com/wJLbNDu.jpg results in matching layer(s) http://i.imgur.com/WnDoY1p.jpg RE: Cropping images - pasting to new layer - layer boundary size - Ofnuts - 03-13-2017 (03-13-2017, 07:05 AM)peterpil19 Wrote: Also, the option to resize the layer boundary is very manual - there is no option to "snap" the layer boundary to the dimensions of the image within. There is Layer>Autocrop layer. But there is no real notion of "the image within", it just crops the image were all pixels are exactly equal, so it works only on image with a clean, uniform background which don't seem to be the case For answering the rest of the question, it would help:
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