Web Resizer was made to convert and downscale common graphic format such as JPEG, PNG, WMF, TGA and so on… to standard web graphic formats i.e. JPEG and PNG for browsing friendly size. When you are using this kind of software (image viewer or image resizer or some kind), perhaps you have experienced that once you select a folder it contains many big images, your application is not responding or your application is freezing. Possibly you have a lot of Mega pixels images inside the selected folder and your application tries to load all those images. It takes a very long time even if you have a fast PC. And you are not able to do anything until it loads all image files on the memory and actually it must reload them all when you want to convert or resize them. But it will not happen with Web Resizer. Web Resizer does not load pictures before you choose to load them – you will not see thumbnail images on the list view when you just select a folder.
Main features:
convert common graphic format to standard web graphic format JPEG and PNG
convert DPI
apply resamplings filter to make better quality
convert sepia tone or black & white (grayscale)
enhance compression
make progressive JPEG file
convert supported graphic file to 24 bit graphic (or even 8 bit PNG without having trouble)
enhance contrast and brightness
automatically sharpen images
rename image
insert text as watermark into image with nice soft shadow
rotate image
browse image
preview image
save a log file (multi resize mode only)
save all resized images to a ZIP file (multi resize mode only)
Note: This software is a freeware for non-commercial use.
Basic Usage
Lets say you start Web Resizer for the first time. Try the following!
1. Use Windows Explorer like folder view and file view to select a folder contains images 2. Select an image file (you will see image preview) 3. Select a destination folder (or check the same folder checkbox to overwrite an original image) 4. Click on a button “Resize”
That’s it! You made a resized image! If your images are taken by a digital camera, I am quite sure you have got less weight than the original file here.
If you leave the other settings as it was, you have got: