I’ve also turned off auto-cropping from WordPress Media Settings but it didn’t work.
Looking forward to your answers.
Thanking in anticipation
]]>I want all my featured images to be in the same 1:1 ratio format by default without having to crop the image before uploading.
Is there a way to do it?
I saw recommended Simple Image Size plugin but it hasn’t been updated for the last 3 years and I have had a bad experience with not updated plugins (malware!) so don’t want to go this way.
I thought that Settings -> Media and set thumbnail to 1:1 would do it, but not…
Is there a way how to set it up, or how can I target featured images by CSS, please?
Thanks
]]>Thanks,
Paul
]]>After using your crop tool on an image, I edited the original image in WP by way of cropping it slightly.
When I then use the your cropping plugin, on this edited image, the eventual result is still based on the original image.
I then found the new copies of the image, created by your plugin (by way of List view in WP Media). I deleted all but the original image. Cleared cache and tried again.
This time however it did something odd which I really don’t think I could explain clearly by text! ..it would just to get too messy and confusing :/
My eventual solution was to upload a new image to WP, with a diff filename, and then everything worked fine.
The bottom line is that I’m inclined not to use the WP Image editing facility as it seems to create problems.
If more details would help, I’m happy to provide what I can.
Thanks
]]>I am using Smart Slider to set a dynamic post slider for a client and everything works great, however my question is regarding image cropping in an image layer. You see I use featured image of a post for blurred background as well as to show the same image on the left side in an image layer: https://prnt.sc/12riphz
Now, those featured images in posts are not always the same size (some are 4:3, some are 4:3 and some are 16:9), so I decided to show the featured image in the layer as 1:1 (400×400 px) but hoped that your plugin could CROP it, so that images are not squeezed or widened.
You see I found the CROP option in a STYLE tab of Image Layer and I thought that would do the trick, but no matter what option for CROP I choose (On, Scroll, Mask), there is no difference in the way image is presented? Images are still full image images squeezed into 400 x 400 square … which does not look good, especially if the original featured image is 16:9.
So, can you please explain what does CROP function do and how I can achieve the same effect as “Fill” effect for background image? Is this something that PRO version of Smart Slider adds? I could not find documentation about it anywhere.
Please let me know ASAP.
Thanks, Danijel
I’m redesigning my website (web 2 print platform) and I’d like to implement a plugin / feature enabling customers to upload their picture and crop it directly.
As their picture is going to be printed with a circle shape (just like Instagram’s profile picture), it would be better if my customers could move their image within this circle shape so they can center the image as they want.
Can I do such a thing with Contact Form 7 ? Do i need an extra plugin to do so ?
Thanks !
]]>I would like to add image cropping to the Gutenberg block I’m developing.
So I would upload an image and then crop separate images each with their own aspect ratio. I can’t rely on the automated cropping as it won’t always pick the best part of the image in each case.
I would envisage defining a number of images (probably 4) complete with aspect ratio using add_image_size(). Then, crop the uploaded image to create the images previously defined. The cropping box should fix the aspect ratio for each image as defined.
I have used a plugin ‘manual image crop’:
(https://www.ads-software.com/plugins/manual-image-crop/)
which does exactly this but it hasn’t been updated for 5 years.
Obviously, I would prefer to stick to well-supported plugin that will hopefully be around for a while.
If anyone knows of such a plugin or has any tips or ideas I’d be really grateful.
Best Regards,
Steve
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