Image Editing Tools
Clean up, enhance, and transform your images with AI.
These are the tools you will reach for most often. They handle the repetitive editing work that eats up hours in Photoshop. Upload an image, pick a tool, get your result in seconds.
Background Removal
1-2 credits per image. Removes the background and gives you a clean PNG with transparency.
Use it for product photos, headshots, or any image where you need the subject isolated. The tool handles hair, fur, and transparent objects well. You get multiple model options: BiRefNet for general use, RMBG for speed, and Birefnet HR for maximum detail on complex edges.
Tips: Start with BiRefNet. It handles 90% of cases perfectly. Switch to Birefnet HR only when you see rough edges on hair or fine details. For simple product shots on solid backgrounds, RMBG is faster and just as accurate.
Background Replace
4 credits per image. Removes the existing background and replaces it with an AI-generated scene based on your text prompt.
Perfect for product photography where you want a specific setting without a photo shoot. Describe the scene you want: "marble countertop with soft window light" or "outdoor cafe table on a sunny day."
Tips:Be specific about lighting and surface materials. "White background" works but "clean white studio backdrop with soft shadow" looks much better. Keep prompts under 2-3 sentences for best results.
Object Removal
3 credits per image. Erase unwanted objects from your images. Draw a mask over the area you want removed, and the AI fills it in naturally.
Great for cleaning up product shots (remove price tags, wires, background clutter) or fixing photos where something distracting snuck into the frame.
Tips: Make your mask slightly larger than the object. The AI needs a bit of context around the edges to blend the fill naturally. For multiple objects, you can mask them all at once rather than running the tool repeatedly.
Upscale
2-3 credits per image. Increase your image resolution up to 4x while adding realistic detail. Multiple models available depending on your content type.
When to use it: low-resolution product images, old photos, small thumbnails that need to go on a billboard. The Topaz model is best for photos. The Creative model adds more detail (good for illustrations). The Conservative model stays closest to the original.
Tips: 2x is usually enough for web use. Go to 4x only when you need print resolution. Upscaling a blurry image will give you a sharper blurry image, so start with the best source you have.
Image to Image
3 credits per image. Transform an existing image based on a text prompt. The AI uses your image as a starting point and applies the changes you describe.
Use it to change the style of a photo, swap colors, add elements, or create variations. The strength slider controls how much the output differs from your original: low strength keeps it close, high strength gives the AI more creative freedom.
Tips:Start with a strength around 0.5-0.7 for most edits. Going above 0.8 often changes the image too dramatically. Be explicit about what you want to keep: "same composition, change the color palette to warm autumn tones."
Depth Map
Free. Generates a grayscale depth map from any image, showing which parts are closer or farther from the camera.
Useful for creating parallax effects, 3D photo animations, or as input for other tools that need depth information. The output is a grayscale image where white is close and black is far.
Tips: Works best on photos with clear foreground and background separation. Flat, top-down shots will produce less interesting depth maps. This tool is free, so experiment freely.