I've recently been photographing with a 4.5mm circular fisheye lens and am finding that a square crop is a nice way to present the resulting images. Is there a way to indicate to Lightroom that I'd like the center of the square crop to be at a certain point in the image?
2 Answers
There are a couple of ways of centring a crop in Lightroom.
If you hold down Alt (Windows) / Option (Mac) as you drag a crop handle you get a symmetrical crop around the centre of the image.
To centre a crop on a specific point other than the centre of the image, go into Crop mode then keep pressing O to toggle between the various crop overlays. If you want to get near enough, the overlay featuring a pair of vertical and horizontal tramlines that make a small centre rectangle is good. If you want to be pixel-precise, keep going until you get the grid of squares. The centre lines are the ones that line up with the crop handles on the outside of the crop area.
-
\$\begingroup\$ Option doesn't seem to work on my computer. If I want to lock the aspect ratio I have to use the lock icon in the crop tool window on the right. \$\endgroup\$– tenmilesCommented Aug 24, 2012 at 11:23
-
\$\begingroup\$ You've misunderstood. Alt/Option doesn't lock the aspect ratio - as you correctly point out, that's what the lock icon is for. Holding Alt/Option down when you drag a crop handle causes the opposite crop handle to move too, keeping the image centred around the same point as you crop. \$\endgroup\$ Commented Aug 24, 2012 at 11:57
-
\$\begingroup\$ Interesting. I was at home trying this out when I posted earlier and didn't notice that. Thanks for clarifying. \$\endgroup\$– tenmilesCommented Aug 24, 2012 at 13:26
Select the first picture and make your adjustments. Then click on Settings>Copy Settings. Make sure that Crop>Aspect Ratio is selected (you may also want Straighten Angle or any of the other stuff available, up to you).
Then select all of your other photos that you want cropped in the same way and then click Settings>Paste Settings. Depending on how many photos you have selected this may take seconds or minutes.
Unfortunately I did not see how you could make a preset with the crop. Nearly everything else present in the Copy Settings dialog is available for a preset, but not crop.
-
1\$\begingroup\$ This seems like a correct answer on how to copy crop settings between photos, but that's not the question that was asked... \$\endgroup\$– ahockleyCommented Aug 24, 2012 at 14:35
-
\$\begingroup\$ I got the impression he wanted to make the same crop on multiple images. He's got a fisheye lens and wants a rectangular area selected that eliminates the black corners. If he gets his crop the way he wants to on one of them (using Mark Whitaker's advice, perhaps) then he can easily apply that crop to all his photos (using my tip). \$\endgroup\$– tenmilesCommented Aug 24, 2012 at 21:25