Crop and resize your image to 21:9 for cinematic scenes, ultra-wide banners, dramatic headers, and landscape visuals that need a long horizontal frame.
Drag & drop or click to select your image (Max 20MB)
Supports JPG, PNG, GIF, WebP formats
An ultra-wide ratio for cinematic compositions, immersive headers, and long-format visual layouts.
21:9 creates a long panoramic shape that works well for cinematic scenes, dramatic landscapes, and immersive visual storytelling.
This ratio fits website hero areas, large headers, and promotional strips where a wide, dramatic visual works better than a standard crop.
Wide travel scenes, city views, stage photos, and environmental shots often feel more natural in an expanded panoramic frame.
Using a fixed 21:9 crop helps your banners and ultra-wide exports stay visually consistent across related pages and campaigns.
Ultra-wide thumbnails, title cards, motion backgrounds, and intro art often benefit from a longer horizontal layout like 21:9.
You can crop and export your 21:9 image locally in the browser, so the original file stays on your own device.
Upload your image, select the 21:9 frame, and export a wide result ready for banners, backdrops, or cinematic layouts.
Start with the photo, banner art, or landscape visual you want to reshape into a 21:9 frame.
Set the aspect ratio to 21:9 and move the crop area until the most important wide content stays in view.
Export the cropped image and use it for cinematic banners, long headers, ultra-wide screens, or large hero areas.
Create a wide cinematic crop for banners, ultra-wide visuals, and landscape-focused layouts in just a few quick steps.
Convert to 21:9Common questions about turning images into a 21:9 ultra-wide crop.
It means the image is much wider than it is tall, creating an ultra-wide frame often used for cinematic visuals and panoramic layouts.
It works well for hero banners, cinematic artwork, wide backdrops, stage visuals, and landscape images that need a dramatic horizontal shape.
No. The tool crops the image to match 21:9, so the remaining area keeps its original proportions without distortion.
Usually yes. A crop removes some content outside the selected frame, which is why repositioning the crop area is important.
That depends on where the image will be used, but wide exports such as 2100x900 or larger are common starting points for this shape.
Usually it is better for landscapes, wide scenes, and banner-style visuals. Portraits often fit more naturally in taller ratios.
JPG is practical for photos, PNG works well for graphics and text-heavy artwork, and WebP can help keep file sizes smaller.
Yes. The crop and export happen locally in your browser, so the file stays on your own device.
Yes. You can resize and download images for free, with no signup required. Processing happens locally in your browser, so there are no usage caps or hidden fees.
No. All resizing and compression run in your browser. Files never leave your device and are not stored on our servers, keeping your images private.
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