Anamorphic Calculator

Confused about how shooting in anamorphic affects your image? How do you deal with it in your editor? This helpful calculator (with a visual preview) makes things a whole lot easier.

BLAZAR Anamorphic Aspect Ratio and Crop Calculator

BLAZAR Anamorphic Aspect Ratio and Crop Calculator

Section 1: Camera / Recording Info

Section 2: Anamorphic Squeeze

Section 3: Image Dimensions After Desqueezing (Uncropped)

Select options above to see results.

Section 4: Desired Aspect Ratio for Timeline/Delivery

Section 5: Total Crop Required In Post

Select options above to see results.
All calculations use full precision internally. Displayed numbers are rounded only for readability.
Image (Uncropped)
Image (After Crop)
Preview is proportional. Not pixel-accurate.

Confused about how shooting in anamorphic affects your image? How do you deal with it in your editor? This helpful calculator (with a visual preview) makes things a whole lot easier.

Simply enter your camera/recording settings and anamorphic lens squeeze factor, then you can see the dimensions of your image after you desqueeze in post.

Then select your desired aspect ratio and figure out how much you need to crop your image to achieve that ratio. This is great if you plan on shooting Vertiscope and/or delivering in multiple aspect ratios, as you can visually see how each ratio fits within your recorded image.

Simply enter your camera/recording settings and anamorphic lens squeeze factor, then you can see the dimensions of your image after you desqueeze in post.

Then select your desired aspect ratio and figure out how much you need to crop your image to achieve that ratio. This is great if you plan on shooting Vertiscope and/or delivering in multiple aspect ratios, as you can visually see how each ratio fits within your recorded image.

Confused about how shooting in anamorphic affects your image? How do you deal with it in your editor? This helpful calculator (with a visual preview) makes things a whole lot easier.

Simply enter your camera/recording settings and anamorphic lens squeeze factor, then you can see the dimensions of your image after you desqueeze in post.

Then select your desired aspect ratio and figure out how much you need to crop your image to achieve that ratio. This is great if you plan on shooting Vertiscope and/or delivering in multiple aspect ratios, as you can visually see how each ratio fits within your recorded image.