Aspect ratios, DPI, print sizes, bleed, frame sizes, social media guides and more. All in real time, no buttons.
Simplify fractions to find the closest common ratio. Example: 1920×1080 simplifies to 16:9. Essential for video, print, and web design.
💡 Use this to resize images without distortion.Convert pixels to physical sizes using DPI. Example: 1000px at 300 DPI = 8.47 cm (3.33 inches). Perfect for print preparation.
💡 Always check required DPI before printing.DPI = Pixels / Inches. Example: 2400px / 8in = 300 DPI. 300 DPI is standard for high‑quality print.
💡 For web, 72‑96 DPI is sufficient; print needs 300+ DPI.Calculate maximum print dimensions without losing quality. Example: 3000×2400px at 300 DPI = 10×8 inches.
💡 Use this to determine canvas or paper size.Bleed extends artwork beyond the trim edge. Standard bleed is 0.125 inch (3mm). Example: 8×10in final + 0.125in bleed = 8.25×10.25in document.
💡 Always ask your printer for their bleed requirements.Find the smallest frame that fits your artwork including mat/margin. Example: 8×10in art + 0.5in margin = 9×11in frame opening.
💡 Add extra margin for mat board.Find maximum crop dimensions to match a target aspect ratio without distortion. Example: 3000×2400px to 16:9 gives 3000×1687px.
💡 Use this before cropping in Photoshop to keep composition.Find the closest standard print ratio for your wall art dimensions. Example: 24×36in = 2:3 ratio (common for posters).
💡 Match the ratio of your artwork to avoid cropping.Calculate the minimum pixel dimensions needed for a given print size at a chosen DPI. Example: 20×30in at 300 DPI = 6000×9000px.
💡 Always prepare images at target DPI to avoid pixelation.