I know that Classic mode is now what’s familiar to you, and you can stick with it if you like it better.
However I think even now there are some concepts being confused, which aren’t represented correctly in what you marked as corrtect.
What Classic mode mostly does is change how the crop rectangle works. The Delete Cropped Pixels and Fill menu are a completely different unrelated subject. These are the biggest differences:
When you switch into the Crop tool…
- Classic mode (original Crop tool mode): Nothing changes until you drag a crop rectangle, then you can adjust it.
- Current default Crop tool mode: The existing Crop tool options are set immediately, so you see a crop rectangle right away. If you like that already, you just hit Enter/Return and you’re done. If you want to adjust it, you’ll see the grid overlay as soon as you drag a crop handle or press Enter/Return. Steps saved.
When you start dragging…
- Classic mode (original Crop tool mode): Canvas stays in place, when you drag the crop rectangle moves over the image.
- Current default Crop tool mode: Crop rectangle stays in place, when you drag what moves is the canvas (like panning behind a frame in video editing). A quirk here is that if you want to reposition the canvas you might have to press Enter/Return first, because dragging within the initial crop rectangle will draw a new one (which is actually what would happen in Classic mode anyway).
There’s nothing wrong with sticking with Classic mode if you like it better. But be aware that the current way, which saves steps, is the new way going forward. Classic mode might stick around for a while on Mac/Windows, but as Photoshop expands to more devices like phone, tablet, and web, they might only go with the new way and not the Classic way. So it’s also good to understand how the current default works.
The thing about Delete Cropped Pixels and the Fill menu is that they exist in both Classic and current modes. The Fill menu exists in both modes, because in both modes it’s possible to have the crop rectangle hang past the edge of the canvas, making you decide how to fill in that gap.
@Mark37430984r9lw wrote:
I think I may have solved the issue. I changed fill to content aware fill. Now, after I hit enter to committ the crop, it creates a normal photo without checkers or a solid pattern at the top border.
If you got that, then be aware that both Content-Aware Fill and Generative Expand are making up new photo content that didn’t exist before, to fill in the gap you left. Which is OK if you want that fake image data, but some only want to use the real picture.
Again, regardless of Classic or current mode, if your crop rectangle leaves a gap beyond the real image you shot, your Fill menu choices are:
- Transparency (checkerboard).
- Background color (as defined in your Tools panel), it is not a “solid pattern” as you said because it isn’t a pattern.
- Content-Aware-Fill (old method of creating a fake image extension).
- Generative Expand (current method of image expansion, using generative AI).
- Or, just adjust the crop rectangle so that the final image only contains the real image you shot, so that Photoshop doesn’t have to use the Fill menu to make up anything or any color to fill in the empty area.
Again, it’s OK if you think it works weird now and you want to go back to the Classic mode. But for the future, it’s good to understand how they designed it. And, it’s important to know that Classic mode on/off, Delete Cropped Pixels, and the Fill menu are three totally different aspects that don’t affect each other. Delete Cropped Pixels is for what happens to original image pixels inside the crop rectangle, and the Fill menu is for what happens to the empty area outside the original image pixels.