How to Crop & Convert PNG to TIFF: Step-by-Step Tutorial
🚀 Follow along with the tool open. PNG to TIFF Crop Converter — free, in your browser.
Open Tool →Overview
This tutorial walks through every step of cropping a PNG image and converting it to a lossless TIFF file using the Data Conversion Center PNG to TIFF Crop Converter. The entire process takes under two minutes and requires no software installation. Your image never leaves your device.
Step 1: Open the Tool
Navigate to dataconversioncenter.com/image-tools/png-to-tiff-crop/ in any modern browser. The tool works in Chrome, Firefox, Edge, and Safari on both desktop and mobile. No sign-in, no extension, and no download required.
Step 2: Load Your PNG
You have two options for loading your source image:
- Drag and drop. Drag a PNG file from your file manager directly onto the drop zone in the tool. The file loads the moment you release it.
- Browse. Click anywhere on the drop zone (or the "Browse Files" link) to open your operating system's file picker. Select your PNG and click Open.
As soon as the image loads, it appears in the source panel on the left side of the tool. The blue crop handles appear at the corners and edges of the image, initially set to the full image boundary.
Step 3: Adjust the Crop Area
The crop overlay has eight handles: four at the corners and four at the midpoints of each edge. Here is how each type behaves:
- Corner handles (NW, NE, SW, SE). Dragging a corner handle resizes the crop in both dimensions simultaneously. Drag the bottom-right corner inward to shrink from that corner, outward to expand. This is the most common handle for free-form cropping.
- Edge handles (N, S, W, E). Dragging an edge handle moves only that edge, constraining the resize to a single axis. Drag the top edge down to trim from the top without affecting the left or right boundaries.
- Interior pan. Click and drag anywhere inside the crop rectangle (not on a handle) to reposition the entire selection without changing its dimensions. Use this to slide the selection to a different area of the image after setting the size.
As you drag, the crop dimensions badge in the panel header updates in real time to show the output pixel dimensions at full image resolution (not the display size). The info bar below the source image shows the exact pixel coordinates of the crop rectangle's origin and extent.
Step 4: Preview the Crop
Before committing to a download, click Preview Crop. A pop-up window opens showing the cropped region rendered at full browser width. The pop-up title displays the exact output dimensions (e.g., "Crop Preview — 800 × 600 px"). Use this to verify your composition — check that you have not clipped important detail at the edges, and confirm the aspect ratio looks correct for your intended use.
Close the preview with the × button or by clicking outside the modal. Return to the source panel and adjust the handles if needed. You can preview as many times as you like with no penalty.
Step 5: Convert & Download the TIFF
When you are satisfied with the crop, click Convert & Download TIFF. The button briefly shows "⏳ Converting…" while the tool:
- Draws the selected pixel region onto an off-screen canvas at full image resolution.
- Reads the raw RGBA pixel data from that canvas using
getImageData. - Encodes the cropped area as an uncompressed baseline TIFF (little-endian, RGB, 8 bits per channel) using a built-in JavaScript encoder — no external library or server required.
- Creates a Blob URL for the encoded file and triggers a browser download.
The file downloads as [original-filename]_crop.tiff. For a source file named photo.png, the output is photo_crop.tiff. The download is immediate — there is no server round-trip.
Step 6: Start Over (Optional)
To crop and convert a different PNG, click ↺ Start Over. This clears the current image, resets the crop handles, and returns the tool to its initial drop zone state.
Tips for Best Results
- Use the Preview before downloading. It is much faster to adjust a handle and re-preview than to open the downloaded TIFF in Photoshop and discover the crop is off.
- Watch the dimensions badge. If your print workflow requires a specific pixel size, keep an eye on the badge as you drag handles to reach the correct value.
- Crop to content, not to a size. Set the crop where the image content is correct first, then check the dimensions. If you need an exact pixel size, use the Image Resizer tool as a second step after downloading the TIFF.
- PNG transparency. If your PNG has a transparent background, the canvas will composite it against white (standard browser behavior for canvas rendering). The output TIFF will show white where the PNG was transparent.
- Large output files are expected. Uncompressed TIFF stores every pixel as 3 bytes. A 1000×1000 crop produces approximately 3 MB of pixel data. This is normal and expected — open the TIFF in Photoshop or GIMP and re-save with LZW compression if file size is a concern.
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