Cropping

Aperture: Use The Thumbnail To Preview Crops

If you want to see how a crop will look in the final image but still play with it, set your workspace up like this:
croppreview
After starting the crop with the C key, adjustments of the crop rectangle in the viewer are accompanied by thumbnail regeneration in the browser. Once it looks right, press A to finish. The same trick works in full screen mode:
croppreview2
Just make sure that the thumbnails are set to be visible all the time by setting the viewer mode to On:
croppreview3
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Aperture: Use Undo/Redo To Compare A Set Of Adjustments

The undo/redo feature of Aperture can be used to quickly compare a set of different adjustments without creating new versions. I show it here using the crop tool, but it works with any of the adjustment tools.

Here is an image I selected and displayed in the viewer:
cropsundo1
I press C to bring up the crop tool and then make a crop, but I don't press A to end the crop yet:
cropsundo2
Now by making several alternate crops either with a new rectangle or by dragging the one that is already there:
cropsundo3
I get Aperture to remember this series of adjustments in its undo buffer.cropsundo4
Finally I press A to accept the last crop and show it:
cropsundo5
Now by pressing command Z to undo and shift command Z to redo I can go back and forth through the crops. This works best in full screen mode, and I can press F at any time to go into or out of full screen.
cropsundo6
When I find the one I like, I just stop and go do something else. The alternatives are forgotten automatically. If I don't like any of then, I press C again and adjust or replace the currently displayed crop.
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