Image Tools - P2
Color Picker From Image
Color Picker From Image for quick calculations, comparisons, formatting, and practical browser-based results.
About Color Picker From Image
Image-editing tasks that used to require desktop software — resizing, compressing, converting formats, or stripping metadata — now run natively in a modern browser. Color Picker From Image processes your files locally using the Canvas API and Web Workers, which means your images are never uploaded to any server. It handles the most common quick-edit jobs without installation.
How to use Color Picker From Image
- Drag and drop your image file onto the drop zone, or click to open a file picker.
- Adjust the settings — target dimensions, quality level, output format — using the controls.
- Press Process to apply the transformation; a preview appears immediately.
- Click Download to save the result to your device.
Frequently asked questions
- Is my image uploaded to a server?
- No. Color Picker From Image uses your browser's built-in Canvas and File APIs to process images entirely on your device. Your file never leaves your machine.
- Which image formats are supported?
- Inputs accepted are JPEG, PNG, WebP, and GIF (static). Output formats vary by tool — check the format selector for the options available.
- Does the tool remove EXIF metadata (GPS location, camera model)?
- Tools that process images through Canvas do strip most EXIF data from the output by default. If EXIF preservation is important (e.g., for professional photography), verify with a dedicated EXIF tool after processing.
- What is the maximum file size I can use?
- In-browser processing works well up to about 20 MB. Larger files may cause the page to slow down or run out of browser memory; for those, use a desktop image editor.
- Will the output quality be lower than the original?
- JPEG compression always reduces quality to some degree. PNG and WebP at 100% quality preserve all detail. The tool shows an estimated file-size saving alongside the quality slider so you can find the right trade-off.
Common use cases
- Compressing a product photo for a web shop without visible quality loss
- Resizing a headshot to exact pixel dimensions for a job application portal
- Converting a PNG to WebP to meet a website's modern-format requirement
- Stripping GPS metadata from a photo before posting it publicly
- Generating a thumbnail from a high-resolution image for social media