Private by design
Your image is processed in the browser for the Phase 1 tool experience. That makes the workflow faster and safer for common image preparation tasks.
Prepare images for Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, YouTube, and profile graphics.
Your image is processed in the browser for the Phase 1 tool experience. That makes the workflow faster and safer for common image preparation tasks.
Large images are one of the easiest ways to slow down a page. This tool is part of a practical workflow for smaller, cleaner, faster visual assets.
Better image formats, file names, dimensions, and compression can improve user experience and make pages easier to maintain.
Prepare images for Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, YouTube, and profile graphics. Use it before uploading images to a website, sending files by email, building product listings, publishing blog posts, or preparing social media graphics.
For best results, start with the highest-quality original image you have, resize it to the actual display size needed, then compress or convert it only as much as necessary.
The Phase 3 TinyImageLab tools are designed around browser-based processing where possible. Your selected image is read locally by your browser for preview and export.
Use JPG for many photos, PNG for graphics or transparency, and WebP for modern website performance when compatibility is acceptable.
Compression can reduce visible quality if pushed too far. Always preview important details like text, faces, product edges, and logos before publishing.
Yes. Smaller, correctly sized images can reduce page weight and improve the visitor experience, especially on mobile connections.
Use the upload area to select an image, then choose a standard size preset or enter custom dimensions. The advanced controls let you keep the original aspect ratio, crop to an exact size, fit the image inside a target box, choose JPG, PNG, or WebP, adjust export quality, and rename the final file before downloading.
For website photos, resize first and export as WebP or JPG. For transparent graphics, use PNG. For social posts, use an exact-size preset and crop intentionally. For product photos, keep the subject centered with enough space around the edges so marketplace previews do not cut off important details.
Check the preview, file size, dimensions, and final format. If the image looks blurry or blocky, increase quality or export at a larger size. If the file is still too large, reduce dimensions before lowering quality too aggressively.