Prepare a 1.18x1.57 inch image for tiny portrait prints, compact document photos, and closely measured profile layouts.
Drag & drop or click to select your image (Max 20MB)
Supports JPG, PNG, GIF, WebP formats
A very small portrait size for form photos, compact records, and careful batch printing.
This size helps when an image must fit a very small formal or profile-style space with minimal waste around the subject.
The narrow upright ratio works well for headshots because it focuses on the face instead of a wide scene.
When every millimeter matters, setting the physical size directly is safer than guessing from pixels alone.
The format can be placed into records, ID-style sections, and other layouts where image space is tightly controlled.
Several copies can be printed on a single sheet, which is efficient when you only need a few tiny trimmed photos.
Sensitive portrait images can be prepared locally in the browser before you use them in a more formal process.
Upload the portrait, set the tiny print size precisely, and export a result ready for sheet printing or compact use.
Upload the headshot or portrait image you need to place into a very small upright print size.
Choose 1.18x1.57 inch, keep the face centered, and raise the DPI if you want clearer detail in the tiny print.
Download the resized file and add it to a larger print sheet or a compact form layout.
Resize a portrait to 1.18x1.57 inch for tiny prints, measured profile layouts, and compact document use.
Resize to 1.18x1.57 InchEverything you need to know about resizing images to 1.18x1.57 Inch
At 300 DPI, 1.18x1.57 Inch is 354x471 pixels. At 150 DPI, it is 177x236 pixels. Choose the DPI that matches how sharp you want the final print to look.
1.18x1.57 inch is useful for tiny portrait prints, small application-style photos, compact profile sections, and other layouts where space is very limited.
1.18x1.57 inch has a narrow portrait ratio that keeps a face-oriented image upright and proportionate in a very small format.
300 DPI is a reliable choice for crisp printing. 150 DPI can still work for quick proofs, drafts, or casual copies where maximum sharpness is not necessary.
Yes. Tiny photo sizes like this are commonly prepared as repeated copies on one larger page and cut to size after printing.
It can work for some compact form-photo layouts, but document standards vary, so check the exact requirement if accuracy is critical.
JPG is usually fine for portraits, PNG is useful in layouts with text or hard edges, and TIFF can help when small detail quality matters for print.
Yes. The image is resized locally in your browser, so your file stays on your device while you adjust the dimensions and download the result.
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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