オンラインで画像をリサイズ

画像のサイズを自由に変更。無料、プライベート、瞬時 — すべてブラウザ内で完結します。

100%プライベート — ファイルがデバイスから送信されることはありません。すべての処理はブラウザ内で完結します。

ここに画像をドロップ

またはクリックして選択 — JPG、PNG、WebP対応

画像リサイズツールの仕組み

このツールは、ブラウザ内蔵のCanvas APIを使用して、指定した新しいサイズで画像を再描画します。処理全体がお使いのデバイス上でローカルに実行されます。画像がサーバーに送信されることは一切ありません。

Tips for Better Image Resizing

  • Lock the aspect ratio — Keep the aspect ratio locked (the default) to prevent your image from looking stretched or squished. This ensures width and height scale proportionally whenever you change either dimension.
  • Use percentage presets for quick scaling — The 25%, 50%, and 75% presets are the fastest way to create thumbnails or reduce file size. A 50% reduction cuts the pixel count by 75%, dramatically shrinking the file while keeping proportions perfect.
  • Pick dimension presets for specific targets — Use built-in presets like 1920×1080 (Full HD), 1280×720 (HD), or 800×600 for common web and social media sizes.
  • Downscale rather than upscale — Shrinking an image preserves quality because the browser discards pixels. Enlarging forces the browser to interpolate new pixel data, which causes blurriness.
  • Choose the right output format — After resizing, export as WebP for the smallest file size, JPEG for photographs, or PNG when you need transparency.
  • Resize before compressing — If you plan to both resize and compress, resize first. Reducing dimensions first means the compressor has fewer pixels to process.
  • Check the final dimensions display — Always verify the output dimensions shown below the width and height inputs before downloading.

When to Resize Your Images

  • Social media profile pictures and banners — Each platform has specific dimension requirements (e.g., 1080×1080 for Instagram posts, 1500×500 for Twitter/X headers). Resizing ensures your images display perfectly without awkward cropping by the platform.
  • Website and blog optimization — A 4000×3000 camera photo is far too large for a blog post. Resizing to 1200px wide before uploading cuts load time dramatically.
  • Email-friendly images — Attaching full-resolution photos to emails wastes bandwidth and may exceed size limits. Resizing to 1280×960 or smaller makes images load instantly in email clients.
  • Thumbnail generation — Use the 25% preset to quickly create thumbnail versions of product photos, gallery images, or portfolio pieces.
  • Print preparation — When preparing images for print, resize to match your print size at 300 DPI — for example, a 4×6 inch print needs a 1200×1800 pixel image.
  • E-commerce product listings — Marketplaces like Amazon, Etsy, and eBay have minimum and maximum image size requirements.

よくある質問

リサイズで画質は劣化しますか?
元のサイズより大きくすると、ブラウザが新しいピクセルを補間するため、若干のぼやけが生じる場合があります。縮小は画質を良好に保ちます。最良の結果を得るには、縮小するか元のサイズに近い値を使用してください。
アスペクト比固定とは?
アスペクト比が固定されている場合(デフォルト)、幅を変更すると高さが自動的に調整され、同じ比率が維持されます(逆も同様)。これにより画像が引き伸ばされたり潰れたりするのを防ぎます。カスタム比率が必要な場合はロックを解除できます。
クイックプリセットとは?
プリセットを使えば、よく使われるサイズに素早くリサイズできます。パーセンテージプリセット(25%、50%、75%)は元のサイズに対する相対値です。ディメンションプリセット(1920×1080、1280×720など)は正確なピクセル値を設定します。SNS、サムネイル、Web公開に便利です。
What are the best image sizes for social media?
Common social media sizes include 1080×1080 for Instagram posts, 1200×630 for Facebook shared images, 1500×500 for Twitter/X headers, and 1280×720 for YouTube thumbnails. Use the dimension presets in ImgLab to quickly hit these targets, or type custom dimensions with aspect ratio lock enabled.
Can I make a small image larger without losing quality?
Upscaling a raster image always involves some quality loss because the browser must generate new pixels that did not exist in the original. Small increases (up to 150%) are usually acceptable, but doubling or tripling an image's size will produce noticeable blurriness. For the best upscale results, start with the highest-resolution source image you have.
Can I resize multiple images at once?
The resize tool currently processes one image at a time, allowing you to fine-tune dimensions for each photo. For batch resizing, you can quickly process images one after another — just drop a new image after downloading the previous one. Each image retains your last-used dimensions and settings for faster workflow.
Does resizing change the DPI/PPI of my image?
ImgLab resizes by pixel dimensions, not by DPI. DPI (dots per inch) only matters for print — it defines how many pixels fit in a physical inch. A 3000×2000 image printed at 300 DPI produces a 10×6.67 inch print. The tool changes the pixel count; your print software controls DPI when you output to paper.

関連ツール