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PNGSVG

PNG to SVG Converter

Convert PNG raster images to SVG vector graphics in your browser. SizeMyPic uses image tracing to analyze your PNG and generate clean vector paths — producing SVGs that scale to any size without pixelation. All processing happens locally on your device.

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Supports JPEG, PNG, WebP, and SVG

Why Convert PNG to SVG?

Infinite Scalability

SVG is a vector format defined by mathematical paths, not pixels. A traced SVG scales from favicon to billboard without quality loss. This makes vectorization essential for logos, icons, and illustrations that need to render crisply at any resolution.

Editable Vector Output

The generated SVG contains real path elements that you can edit in tools like Figma, Illustrator, or Inkscape. Adjust colors, reshape curves, and modify individual elements — something impossible with raster PNG files.

Adjustable Trace Detail

SizeMyPic's quality slider controls vectorization fidelity: fewer colors and simplified paths for clean, minimal SVGs (logos, icons), or higher detail for complex illustrations. The tracer generates between 4 and 64 color layers depending on your setting.

Frequently Asked Questions

Will the SVG look exactly like my PNG?

Vectorization is an approximation, not a pixel-perfect copy. The tracer works best with images that have distinct shapes and limited colors — logos, icons, line art, and simple illustrations. Photographs will be stylized into a posterized vector interpretation, which can be an interesting effect but won't match the original photo.

How does PNG to SVG vectorization work?

SizeMyPic uses color quantization to reduce the image to a set number of colors (4-64 based on your quality setting), then traces the boundaries of each color region into Bezier curves. The result is a layered SVG with one path group per color. This approach, based on the ImageTracer algorithm, runs entirely in your browser using JavaScript.

What types of images vectorize well?

Images with clear shapes and limited colors produce the best results: logos, icons, line drawings, cartoons, and geometric patterns. High-contrast images with solid color regions trace cleanly. Photographs, gradients, and highly detailed textures will produce large, complex SVGs — for those, consider using PNG or WebP instead.

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