Convert WebP raster images to SVG vector graphics in your browser. SizeMyPic traces your WebP image into clean vector paths — producing scalable SVGs that render crisply at any size. All processing runs locally on your device.
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Supports JPEG, PNG, WebP, and SVG
WebP images have fixed pixel dimensions and degrade when enlarged. The traced SVG output uses mathematical curves that scale infinitely — from thumbnail to poster size with zero quality loss. Essential for logos and icons saved in raster WebP format.
The output SVG contains real vector paths, not an embedded raster image. Open it in Figma, Illustrator, or Inkscape to recolor, reshape, and modify individual elements. This is particularly useful for recovering editable versions of logos or icons you only have as WebP.
SizeMyPic's quality slider controls how many colors the tracer uses (4-64) and how much path simplification is applied. Low settings produce minimal, clean vectors ideal for logos. High settings capture more detail for complex illustrations.
Vectorization is most useful when you have a raster WebP of a logo, icon, or simple illustration that you need to scale up or edit. If you're working with photographs, vectorization produces a stylized poster effect rather than a faithful reproduction — for photos, converting to PNG or JPEG is usually more appropriate.
Accuracy depends on the image content. Simple graphics with solid colors and clear edges (logos, icons, line art) trace very accurately. Complex images with gradients, textures, and many colors produce an approximation — the tracer quantizes colors into discrete regions and traces their boundaries as Bezier curves.
Not in a photorealistic sense. Vectorization converts continuous-tone images into flat color regions with hard edges. The result is a posterized, illustration-style interpretation. For a more detailed result, increase the quality slider to use more colors (up to 64). For a faithful raster copy, convert to PNG instead.