Skip to main content

How to create your own iPad wallpaper

Yes, Apple does provide a number of tasteful backgrounds for you to enjoy and peruse, and there are a number of wallpaper apps, but sometimes you want your own art or photos to be the background of your iPad. The process is fairly straight forward, but in this how-to we’ll walk you through the steps to get the best looking wallpapers possible.

For the most part, making an iPad wallpaper is like making a background for any other type of display. You crop your image to the appropriate size and save it at the correct resolution. However, this doesn’t exactly work for the iPad.

Recommended Videos

If you look at the specs for a first- or second-generation iPad, the device comes with a resolution of 1024 x 768 at 132 pixels per inch. The 2012 iPad comes with a resolution of 2048 x 1536 pixels, which is exactly double that of the iPad and iPad 2. Our advice here is meant for either version.

You would think that cropping an image at either of the resolution for the iPad would work, but you’d be wrong. Remember that the iPad rotates the background depending on how you have the device oriented. You’ll need to take this into account when creating your wallpaper. The 1024 (2048) pixels is the long side and the 768 (1536) pixels is on the shorter end of the iPad. 

This means that your wallpaper will display in two different modes: In portrait orientation it’s 1024 (2048) tall and 768 (1536) pixels wide. Landscape orientation is 768 (1536) tall and 1024 (2048) pixels wide.

On to the steps!

1. Open up an image editing program. We use Photoshop.

2. Create a new image in a square with edges of 1024 x 1024 (2048 x 2048 for the new iPad). 

3. Now, crop the images to that the more important part is visible in the central 768 x 768 area.

4. You’ll want to save the image at 132 (264) dpi.

Hope it helps.

Scott Younker
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Your next iPhone may have no bezels. Here’s why that could be a problem
iPhone 14 Pro Max laying on top of iPad showing always-on display with wallpaper setting off.

Don’t believe everything you see, but there’s a certain joy in imagining products with a futuristic touch to them. One such fantastical element of the smartphone industry is a truly bezel-free all-screen phone. And as implausible as that sounds, it looks like Apple might be the one to achieve it — and at the biggest scale imaginable.

According to South Korean outlet The Elec, Apple has reportedly asked, “Samsung Display and LG Display to develop an OLED that removes all front bezels from the iPhone.” Apple has been painfully slow at eliminating the bezel on iPhones and continues to sell the iPhone SE (2022), which should ideally exist in an era that is half a decade too persistent.

Read more
Another report suggests the iPhone 15 Pro will be pricier
The Apple logo on the iPhone 14 Pro Max.

Apple is expected to manufacture a slightly smaller number of iPhone 15 handsets compared to the iPhone 14 last year, but the company is eyeing an increase in revenue when the device launches in the fall.

How? Because it’s considering increasing the cost of the iPhone 15 Pro models.

Read more
Best Apple Deals: MacBooks, AirPods, iPads, iMacs, AirTags and more
dell xps 15 vs macbook pro 16 apple ry 14 1200x9999

Pretty much all Apple products are some of the best-in-class for their respective type of tech. However, you do pay for the privilege with many devices like iPads or MacBooks costing a little more than non-Apple variants. That's why it's so useful to find great Apple deals like the ones below. We've picked out some of the best ways to save substantially on highly sought after Apple products from accessories to AirPods and more. Take a look below at some of our favorite Apple deals right now.
AirTags (4-pack) -- $89, was $99

If you worry about misplacing items, you need Apple AirTags. With a simple one-tap setup, your iPhone or iPad is instantly connected to an AirTag so that you can always use find items via the Find My app. That could be your car keys, your bag, or anything else that you can fit or slip an AirTag into. If you misplace something, you can simply put the AirTag into Lost Mode to be notified when it's detected in the Find My network helping you pin it down. You can also play a sound through the built-in speaker if you know it's nearby but you're not sure if it's worth moving the couch to find it.

Read more