Bulk Made Documentation

Resize Modes

Understanding FIT, FILL, STRETCH, and NO RESIZE modes with visual examples and use cases

Understanding How Designs Fit Templates

Resize modes control how your PNG design fits into the smart object area of your PSD template. Choosing the right mode ensures your designs look professional and undistorted in your mockups.

5.1 What Are Resize Modes?

The Challenge: Your PNG designs and PSD template smart objects rarely have identical dimensions. A square logo (1000×1000px) needs to fit into a rectangular coaster template (1200×800px smart object area).

The Solution: Resize modes tell the plugin how to handle the size difference between your design and the template's smart object bounds.

Four Options:

  • Fit – Scales design to fit entirely inside (may leave empty space)
  • Fill – Scales design to fill entire area (may crop edges)
  • Stretch (ignore aspect ratio) – Stretches design to fill exactly (may distort)
  • No Resize – Places design at original size (may overflow or be too small)

5.2 Visual Guide to Resize Modes

Example Scenario:

  • Design: Square logo (1000×1000px, aspect ratio 1:1)
  • Template Smart Object: Rectangular area (1200×800px, aspect ratio 3:2)

Mode 1: FIT

What it does:

  • Scales design to fit entirely within the smart object bounds
  • Maintains aspect ratio (no distortion)
  • May leave empty space on sides or top/bottom

When to use:

  • Design aspect ratio doesn't match template
  • You want to preserve design proportions exactly
  • Empty space is acceptable (or will be filled by background)

Visual Result:

┌─────────────────────────┐
│ ┌─────┐ │ ← Empty space on sides
│ │ │ │
│ │ LOGO│ │ ← Design fits entirely inside
│ │ │ │
│ └─────┘ │ ← Empty space on sides
└─────────────────────────┘

Example Use Cases:

  • Logos that must remain proportional
  • Designs with important border elements that can't be cropped
  • Templates with decorative backgrounds where empty space blends in

💡 Pro Tip: Use FIT when your design's aspect ratio is significantly different from the template, and you can't afford any distortion.

Mode 2: FILL

What it does:

  • Scales design to completely fill the smart object bounds
  • Maintains aspect ratio (no distortion)
  • May crop edges of design to fill space

When to use:

  • Design aspect ratio is close to template (but not exact)
  • You want no empty space
  • Edges of design can be cropped without losing important elements

Visual Result:

┌─────────────────────────┐
│ ┌───────────────────┐ │ ← Design fills entire area
│ │ │ │
│ │ LOGO │ │ ← Sides may be cropped
│ │ │ │
│ └───────────────────┘ │ ← Design fills entire area
└─────────────────────────┘

Example Use Cases:

  • Background patterns that can be cropped
  • Designs with centered focal points (edges less important)
  • Full-bleed artwork

⚠️ Warning: Important design elements near edges may be cropped. Test first!

Mode 3: STRETCH (ignore aspect ratio)

What it does:

  • Stretches design to exactly match smart object dimensions
  • Ignores aspect ratio (may distort)
  • No empty space, no cropping

When to use:

  • Design is already created to match template dimensions
  • You've intentionally designed for this specific template
  • Design is abstract/pattern-based (distortion not noticeable)

Visual Result:

┌─────────────────────────┐
│ ┌───────────────────┐ │ ← Design stretched to fill
│ │ │ │
│ │ L O G O │ │ ← May appear stretched/distorted
│ │ │ │
│ └───────────────────┘ │ ← Fills exactly
└─────────────────────────┘

Example Use Cases:

  • Designs created specifically for each template's dimensions
  • Text-based designs where slight stretching is acceptable
  • Abstract patterns where distortion isn't noticeable

💡 Pro Tip: This is the most commonly used mode when you design PNGs specifically for your templates. Create designs that match your template aspect ratios, then use STRETCH for perfect placement.

Mode 4: NO RESIZE

What it does:

  • Places design at original pixel dimensions
  • No scaling, no distortion
  • May overflow or be too small for smart object area

When to use:

  • Design is already the exact size needed
  • You need pixel-perfect placement
  • You're using high-resolution designs for large-format printing

Visual Result (design too large):

┌─────────────────────────┐
│ │ │ │ ← Design overflows bounds
│ │ │ │
│ │ L O G O │ │ ← Only center is visible
│ │ │ │
│ │ │ │ ← Design overflows bounds
└─────────────────────────┘

Visual Result (design too small):

┌─────────────────────────┐
│ │ ← Empty space
│ ┌───┐ │
│ │LOG│ │ ← Design too small
│ └───┘ │
│ │ ← Empty space
└─────────────────────────┘

Example Use Cases:

  • Pixel-perfect mockups for print production
  • Designs pre-sized to exact template dimensions
  • Advanced workflows with precise dimension control

⚠️ Warning: Only use this mode if you know the exact pixel dimensions of your template's smart object area.

5.3 Choosing the Right Resize Mode

Quick Decision Guide

Ask yourself these questions:

  1. Did I create my design to match this template's dimensions?

    • ✅ Yes → Use STRETCH
    • ❌ No → Continue to question 2
  2. Is my design's aspect ratio similar to the template?

    • ✅ Yes (within 10%) → Use STRETCH or FILL
    • ❌ No (significantly different) → Continue to question 3
  3. Can I afford empty space in the mockup?

    • ✅ Yes → Use FIT
    • ❌ No → Use FILL (accept edge cropping)
  4. Do I need pixel-perfect placement?

    • ✅ Yes → Use NO RESIZE (advanced users only)

Resize Mode Comparison Table

5.4 Understanding Aspect Ratios

What Is Aspect Ratio?

Aspect ratio is the relationship between width and height of an image.

Common aspect ratios:

  • 1:1 (Square) – 1000×1000px, 2000×2000px
  • 4:3 (Standard) – 1200×900px, 2400×1800px
  • 16:9 (Widescreen) – 1920×1080px, 3840×2160px
  • 3:2 (Photo) – 1500×1000px, 3000×2000px

Why it matters: When your design's aspect ratio doesn't match the template's smart object aspect ratio, you'll need to choose between:

  • Empty space (FIT mode)
  • Cropping (FILL mode)
  • Distortion (STRETCH mode)

How to Check Aspect Ratio

For your PNG designs:

  1. Right-click the PNG file
  2. Select "Properties" (Windows) or "Get Info" (Mac)
  3. Note the dimensions (e.g., 2000×1500px)
  4. Calculate ratio: 2000 ÷ 1500 = 1.33 (approximately 4:3)

For your PSD template smart objects:

  1. Open the PSD in Photoshop
  2. Select the smart object layer
  3. Check the Transform panel for dimensions
  4. Calculate ratio: width ÷ height

Matching Aspect Ratios

Best Practice: Create your PNG designs to match your template's smart object aspect ratio.

Example:

  • Template smart object: 1200×800px (aspect ratio 3:2)
  • Create designs at: 3000×2000px (same 3:2 ratio, higher resolution)
  • Use STRETCH mode for perfect placement

💡 Pro Tip: Create design templates in your graphic design software (Corel, Canva, Illustrator, etc.) with the correct aspect ratios. Save them as presets for quick access.

5.5 Common Aspect Ratio Scenarios

Scenario 1: Square Design on Rectangular Template

Setup:

  • Design: 2000×2000px (1:1 square)
  • Template: 1500×1000px (3:2 rectangle)

Options:

FIT Mode:

  • Design scales to 1000×1000px (fits height)
  • 250px empty space on left and right
  • ✅ No distortion
  • ⚠️ Empty space visible

FILL Mode:

  • Design scales to 1500×1500px (fills width)
  • Top and bottom 250px cropped
  • ✅ No empty space
  • ⚠️ Edges cropped

STRETCH Mode:

  • Design stretched to 1500×1000px
  • ✅ No empty space, no cropping
  • ⚠️ Design appears wider/flatter

Recommendation: Use FIT if logo/text must stay proportional, or FILL if edges can be cropped.

Scenario 2: Rectangular Design on Square Template

Setup:

  • Design: 3000×2000px (3:2 rectangle)
  • Template: 1500×1500px (1:1 square)

Options:

FIT Mode:

  • Design scales to 1500×1000px (fits width)
  • 250px empty space on top and bottom
  • ✅ No distortion
  • ⚠️ Empty space visible

FILL Mode:

  • Design scales to 2250×1500px (fills height)
  • Left and right 375px cropped
  • ✅ No empty space
  • ⚠️ Edges cropped

STRETCH Mode:

  • Design stretched to 1500×1500px
  • ✅ No empty space, no cropping
  • ⚠️ Design appears taller/narrower

Recommendation: Use FILL if centered content is most important, or FIT if full design must be visible.

Scenario 3: Matching Aspect Ratios

Setup:

  • Design: 3000×2000px (3:2 rectangle)
  • Template: 1500×1000px (3:2 rectangle)

Options:

FIT, FILL, or STRETCH Mode:

  • All three modes produce identical results
  • Design scales to 1500×1000px
  • ✅ Perfect fit, no distortion, no cropping, no empty space

Recommendation: Use STRETCH (standard choice when ratios match).

💡 Pro Tip: This is the ideal scenario! Always try to match your design aspect ratios to your templates.

5.6 Real-World Examples by Product Type

Wooden Coasters (Typically Square)

Template Smart Object: 1000×1000px (1:1)

Recommended Workflow:

  1. Create designs at 2000×2000px (1:1 square)
  2. Use STRETCH mode
  3. Result: Perfect fit, no distortion

If using non-square designs:

  • Use FIT for logos that must stay proportional
  • Use FILL for background patterns

Wooden Plaques (Typically Rectangular)

Template Smart Object: 1500×1000px (3:2)

Recommended Workflow:

  1. Create designs at 3000×2000px (3:2 rectangle)
  2. Use STRETCH mode
  3. Result: Perfect fit, no distortion

If using square designs:

  • Use FIT if empty space is acceptable
  • Use FILL if edges can be cropped

Wine Glasses (Typically Tall/Narrow)

Template Smart Object: 800×1200px (2:3 portrait)

Recommended Workflow:

  1. Create designs at 1600×2400px (2:3 portrait)
  2. Use STRETCH mode
  3. Result: Perfect fit, no distortion

If using square designs:

  • Use FILL (top/bottom will be cropped)
  • Avoid FIT (too much empty space on sides)

Chopping Boards (Typically Wide Rectangle)

Template Smart Object: 2000×1000px (2:1 wide)

Recommended Workflow:

  1. Create designs at 4000×2000px (2:1 wide)
  2. Use STRETCH mode
  3. Result: Perfect fit, no distortion

If using square designs:

  • Use FIT (empty space on left/right)
  • Use FILL (top/bottom cropped)

5.7 Testing Resize Modes

Create a Test Batch

Best Practice: Before processing hundreds of mockups, test all four resize modes with a single design and template.

Step-by-Step:

  1. Select one PSD template (e.g., WoodenCoaster.psd)
  2. Select one PNG design (e.g., Square-Wood.png)
  3. Create four output folders:
    • Test-Fit/
    • Test-Fill/
    • Test-Stretch/
    • Test-NoResize/
  4. Process four separate batches:
    • Batch 1: Resize Mode = FIT → Output to Test-Fit/
    • Batch 2: Resize Mode = FILL → Output to Test-Fill/
    • Batch 3: Resize Mode = STRETCH → Output to Test-Stretch/
    • Batch 4: Resize Mode = NO RESIZE → Output to Test-NoResize/
  5. Compare results side-by-side

💡 Pro Tip: Save these test mockups as a reference library. Label each with the resize mode used.

5.8 Advanced Tips & Tricks

Tip 1: Create Design Presets by Aspect Ratio

In your design software (Canva, Illustrator, Photoshop), create canvas presets for common aspect ratios:

Preset Library:

  • Square (1:1): 2000×2000px
  • Standard Rectangle (3:2): 3000×2000px
  • Wide Rectangle (2:1): 4000×2000px
  • Portrait (2:3): 1600×2400px

Save these as templates for quick access when creating new designs.

Tip 2: Use Safe Zones for FILL Mode

If using FILL mode (which crops edges), create a "safe zone" in your designs:

Example:

  • Canvas: 3000×2000px
  • Safe zone: 2400×1600px (centered)
  • Keep all important elements (text, logos) inside safe zone
  • Allow decorative elements to extend to edges

This ensures important content is never cropped.

Tip 3: Organize PNGs by Aspect Ratio

Structure your Designs folder by aspect ratio:

Designs/
├── Square-1-1/
│ ├── Square-Wood.png
│ └── Square-Print.png
├── Rectangle-3-2/
│ ├── Rectangle-Wood.png
│ └── Rectangle-Print.png
└── Portrait-2-3/
└── Portrait-Glass.png

This makes it easy to batch process designs with matching templates.

Tip 4: Use Consistent Resolution

Recommended: Create all designs at 300 DPI (high resolution).

Why?

  • Ensures sharp, professional mockups
  • Works for both web and print use
  • Scales cleanly in all resize modes

Example dimensions at 300 DPI:

  • Square: 2000×2000px (6.67″ × 6.67″)
  • Rectangle (3:2): 3000×2000px (10″ × 6.67″)
  • Portrait (2:3): 1600×2400px (5.33″ × 8″)

Tip 5: Document Your Template Dimensions

Create a reference document listing each template's smart object dimensions:

Example:

WoodenCoaster.psd → 1000×1000px (1:1) → Use Square designs + STRETCH
WoodenPlaque.psd → 1500×1000px (3:2) → Use Rectangle designs + STRETCH
WineGlass.psd → 800×1200px (2:3) → Use Portrait designs + STRETCH ChoppingBoard.psd → 2000x1000px (2:1)  → Use wide designs + STRETCH 

Keep this handy for quick reference when creating new designs.

5.9 Troubleshooting Resize Issues

Problem: Design looks stretched or squashed

Cause: Using STRETCH mode with mismatched aspect ratios

Solutions:

  • Switch to FIT or FILL mode
  • Recreate design to match template aspect ratio
  • Use a different template with matching ratio

Problem: Empty space around design

Cause: Using FIT mode with mismatched aspect ratios

Solutions:

  • Switch to FILL mode (accept edge cropping)
  • Switch to STRETCH mode (accept distortion)
  • Recreate design to match template aspect ratio
  • Use a template with decorative background (empty space blends in)

Problem: Important elements are cropped

Cause: Using FILL mode with important content near edges

Solutions:

  • Switch to FIT mode (accept empty space)
  • Redesign with safe zones (keep important elements centered)
  • Use a template with larger smart object area

Problem: Design is too small or overflows

Cause: Using NO RESIZE mode with incorrect dimensions

Solutions:

  • Switch to FIT, FILL, or STRETCH mode
  • Recreate design at exact template dimensions
  • Check template smart object dimensions and match exactly

Problem: Text looks distorted

Cause: Using STRETCH mode with text-heavy designs and mismatched ratios

Solutions:

  • Switch to FIT mode (preserves text proportions)
  • Recreate design with text at correct aspect ratio
  • Use vector-based text that can be stretched without quality loss

5.10 Resize Mode Recommendations by Use Case

For Logo-Based Designs

Recommended: FIT mode

  • Preserves logo proportions exactly
  • Maintains brand integrity
  • Empty space is acceptable

For Full-Bleed Artwork

Recommended: FILL mode

  • No empty space
  • Edge cropping is acceptable
  • Centered focal points remain visible

For Designs Created for Specific Templates

Recommended: STRETCH mode

  • Perfect fit
  • No distortion (ratios already match)
  • Most efficient workflow

For Pixel-Perfect Production Mockups

Recommended: NO RESIZE mode

  • Exact dimensions
  • No scaling artifacts
  • Requires precise design dimensions

For Text-Heavy Designs

Recommended: FIT or STRETCH (with matching ratios)

  • Avoids text distortion
  • Maintains readability
  • Avoid FILL (may crop text)

For Abstract Patterns

Recommended: FILL or STRETCH

  • Distortion less noticeable
  • No empty space
  • Fills template completely

5.11 Quick Reference: Resize Mode Cheat Sheet

When to Use Each Mode

5.12 Next Steps

Now that you understand resize modes, you're ready to:

  • ✅ Create designs with correct aspect ratios
  • ✅ Choose the right resize mode for each batch
  • ✅ Avoid distortion, cropping, and empty space issues
  • ✅ Generate professional, polished mockups

Continue to:

  • Section 6: Processing Types - Learn about engraving and print effects (Pro Plan)
  • Section 7: Output Files - Understand file naming and organization
  • Section 9: Troubleshooting Guide - Fix common resize issues

Happy mockup creating! The Bulk Made Team