🖼️ Image Tools
Images are everywhere — profile pictures, marketing banners, app icons, QR codes on packaging. The problem is that most online image tools require you to upload your files to someone else's server. That means your photos, your brand assets, and sometimes your private screenshots pass through infrastructure you don't control.
Every tool on this page works differently. All processing happens inside your browser. Your images are never uploaded to any server — they stay on your device from start to finish. Whether you're converting a PNG to WebP, stamping a watermark on a batch of photos, or generating a favicon for your site, the pixels never leave your machine. No account required, no file-size upload limits imposed by a backend, and no wondering who else might access your files.
The trade-off is that very large files depend on your device's processing power and available memory. For most everyday image tasks — web assets, social media graphics, icons, QR codes — browser-based processing is more than fast enough, and the privacy benefit is worth it.
Tools in this category
Đóng dấu ảnh
Thêm hình mờ vào hình ảnh của bạn.
Chuyển đổi hình ảnh
Thay đổi kích thước hình ảnh và chuyển đổi sang các định dạng WebP, JPEG, PNG.
Tạo mã QR
Chuyển đổi văn bản hoặc URL thành mã QR.
Tạo Favicon
Chuyển đổi hình ảnh thành favicon với nhiều kích thước khác nhau.
Trình tải xuống hình thu nhỏ YouTube
Trích xuất và tải xuống hình thu nhỏ video YouTube ở chất lượng cao (4K, HD). Công cụ miễn phí và dễ dàng.
Trình sửa ảnh
Cắt, xoay và áp dụng bộ lọc cho hình ảnh.
Frequently asked questions
Are my images really not uploaded anywhere?
Correct. All processing uses the Canvas API and JavaScript running in your browser. You can verify this by opening your browser's Network tab — no image data is sent to any server. Your files stay entirely on your device.
Which image format should I choose for the web?
WebP offers the best balance of quality and file size for most use cases. Use PNG when you need lossless transparency (e.g., logos), JPEG for photographs where small file size matters, and SVG for icons and illustrations that need to scale. AVIF is newer and even smaller than WebP, but browser support is still catching up.
Does converting between formats reduce image quality?
Converting from a lossy format (JPEG) to another lossy format compounds quality loss — each re-encoding discards data. Going from lossless (PNG) to lossy (JPEG/WebP) loses some detail once. Converting between lossless formats (PNG ↔ BMP) preserves quality perfectly. The quality slider in the converter lets you control the trade-off.
Is there a file-size limit?
There's no upload limit since nothing is uploaded. The practical limit depends on your device's RAM and browser. Most modern devices handle images up to 20–50 MB without issues. Very large images (100 MB+) may cause the browser tab to slow down or run out of memory.