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    TOOL · IMAGE

    Vectorize an image (JPG/PNG to SVG)

    Drop a logo, drawing or icon and get an SVG that scales to any size without jagged edges. All in your browser, nothing sent anywhere.

    works best with logos, drawings and icons — photos become stylized (posterized) art, not a faithful copy.

    Processed in your browser — your files never leave your computer.

    How it works

    1. Drop your image here

      Drag a JPG, PNG or WebP up to 10 MB onto the dotted area, or click to choose. Images over 1500 px are scaled down first — with a notice.

    2. Pick the detail level

      Few colors (6) for flat logos, medium (16) for everyday use, many colors (32) for drawings full of tones. Fewer colors = smaller SVG.

    3. Compare and download the SVG

      See the original and the vector side by side, check the file size and download the .svg ready to use at any scale.

    Frequently asked questions

    Does it work for photos?

    Sort of — and honesty matters here: vectorization truly works for logos, drawings and icons, which have flat areas of color. A photo becomes stylized (posterized) art, poster-like: it can look great as an effect, but it is not a faithful copy.

    What is SVG and why would I want one?

    SVG is a vector image: instead of pixels it stores mathematical shapes. That is why it scales to any size — from favicon to billboard — without jagged edges, and it is usually lightweight. It is the ideal format for logos and icons on websites.

    Is my image uploaded to a server?

    No. Vectorization happens inside your browser, on your device. You can even turn off Wi-Fi after the page loads.

    Why are large images scaled down to 1500 px?

    Because vectorizing a large image explodes processing time and SVG size — it could freeze your browser. For logos, icons and drawings, 1500 px is more than enough; a notice appears whenever the resize happens.

    Will the SVG be smaller than the original file?

    It depends. A simple logo with few colors usually gets much smaller; a highly detailed image can produce an SVG larger than the original. The file size is shown with the result, before you download.

    Can I edit the SVG afterwards?

    Yes. The file opens in any vector editor — Figma, Illustrator, Inkscape — with shapes separated by color, ready to tweak.

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