Prepare a 1.38x1.77 inch portrait image for compact profile photos, document-style layouts, and neatly trimmed small prints.
Drag & drop or click to select your image (Max 20MB)
Supports JPG, PNG, GIF, WebP formats
A slim portrait size for compact headshots, small profile photos, and carefully measured document-style prints.
The shape works well for compact headshots and profile-style images where the face needs to remain clear within a small space.
Because the format is upright and narrow, it helps keep attention on the person rather than empty background space.
When a print must fit a measured small slot, using the exact inch size keeps later trimming and placement more predictable.
This size can be placed into records, forms, or profile sections where the image area is small but still needs clean proportions.
Multiple copies can be repeated on one page so you can print once and cut out only the number you need.
If you are working with personal profile photos, local resizing keeps the basic preparation step on your own device.
Upload the portrait, lock in the small upright size, and export a file that is ready for sheet printing or compact layout use.
Upload the portrait or headshot that needs to fit a compact upright print size.
Choose 1.38x1.77 inch, check the crop around the face, and confirm the DPI required for a clean final result.
Download the resized image and place it into a print sheet, record layout, or small photo block.
Resize a headshot or profile image to 1.38x1.77 inch for exact small-print use and compact portrait layouts.
Resize to 1.38x1.77 InchEverything you need to know about resizing images to 1.38x1.77 Inch
At 300 DPI, 1.38x1.77 Inch is 414x531 pixels. At 150 DPI, it is 207x266 pixels. Choose the DPI that matches how sharp you want the final print to look.
This size is useful for compact portrait prints, profile images, application-style photos, and other small upright layouts that need close dimension control.
1.38x1.77 inch has a narrow portrait ratio that favors headshots, face-centered images, and small vertical print blocks.
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. Compact portrait sizes are usually printed in multiples on one sheet and then trimmed for individual use.
It can suit some document or profile-photo layouts, but official size rules vary, so confirm the exact requirement if the print is for formal use.
JPG is suitable for portraits, PNG is helpful if the image will sit inside a designed layout, and TIFF can be useful when a print shop asks for a high-quality source.
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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