Raheg Image Resizer

Resize images for web, social and print — intelligent and aspect-ratio aware.

Raheg in plain language

Raheg resize asks three questions and answers a fourth itself. You provide the target width, the target height, and pick stretch / crop / fit. The fourth decision — output format — is made for you based on whether the source carried transparency. Transparent inputs export to PNG or WebP; opaque ones default to WebP. The result panel exposes the choice in case you want to override it.

The home page sits at three explicit decisions for the most common task. We track that count internally; raising it above five tends to correlate with abandonment in the upload step. The advanced panel exists for the loud minority who want to override every default, but the quiet majority should be able to ignore it entirely.

Three decisions, one click

  1. Upload the source image. Raheg resize is a single-file operation.
  2. Type the target width and height in pixels. The other dimension is locked to the aspect ratio unless you explicitly unlock it.
  3. Pick stretch, crop or fit. Most users pick fit; that is the safe default.
  4. Press Resizer. The output container is chosen for you (PNG if the source was transparent, WebP otherwise) and shown in the result panel.
  5. Override the output format from the advanced panel if you need a different one. Most users do not.

Technical handbook from the Raheg team

The following sections extend the quick steps above with the engineering detail we would give to a colleague. Raheg Smart Converter is built around intelligent, opinionated graphic formatting decisions; every recommendation below is written against real workloads, not generic marketing copy. If anything conflicts with your in-house policy, your policy wins — but if you are starting from scratch, this is the baseline we ship in production.

Stretch, Crop and Fit in production terms

Stretch maps the source rectangle exactly to your width/height box, discarding aspect ratio. Use it only when distortion is irrelevant (abstract textures) or when you intentionally squash for a stylised effect. Crop keeps aspect ratio and fills the box by trimming overflow; it is the right mode for fixed-aspect slots such as Instagram squares or banner rails where losing edge pixels is acceptable. Fit inscribes the image inside the box without trimming; transparent PNG/WebP canvases may show empty gutters. For marketplace main images that mandate a percentage of frame occupied by the product, Crop is usually correct; Fit is correct when you must not lose any edge detail.

Upscaling limitations

Enlarging an image cannot invent true high-frequency detail. Upscaled output interpolates existing pixels; sharpening in post helps perceived acuity but does not restore information that was never captured. Raheg allows upscaling because many social templates require a minimum pixel dimension larger than a small source, but you should treat upscaled assets as pragmatic, not archival.

Social and performance dimensions

Modern retina displays mean you should target roughly 2× the CSS pixel width of the eventual slot when exporting raster heroes. A 600 CSS-pixel-wide column benefits from a 1200-pixel source. Our resizer makes that explicit: type the CSS dimension doubled, or type the CSS dimension once and accept softer output on high-DPI phones. The product blog on Raheg Smart Converter documents platform-specific safe harbours.

Encoder interaction with resize

Resizing is applied before lossy recompression. That ordering minimises generation loss. If you resize in one tool and compress in another, you add generations; Raheg keeps both operations in one pass for supported paths. PNG outputs are lossless but can balloon in size if you resize up dramatically; consider WebP lossless as an intermediate if byte size matters.

Operational guidance

For teams standardising imagery, pick three canonical output widths (mobile, tablet, desktop) and encode presets into your design-system documentation. Raheg is intentionally narrow so that it drops into such a preset-driven pipeline without retraining staff on seventy checkboxes. For smart defaults and intelligent format selection, treat each resize as a deterministic function: same source, same settings, same bytes out.

Worth reading later

What product teams ask Raheg

  1. 01

    How do Stretch, Crop and Fit modes differ?

    Stretch forces the image to the exact pixel dimensions you typed, even if it distorts the picture. Crop and Fit keep the original aspect ratio: Crop trims overflow to fill the box, while Fit shrinks the image to fully fit inside the box without trimming, leaving any leftover transparent area.

  2. 02

    Will resizing reduce image quality?

    Downscaling almost always preserves visible quality. Upscaling stretches existing pixels and introduces softness, so Raheg can grow an image but the final output will not contain detail that was not in the source.

  3. 03

    Why does my PNG look bigger than the original after resize?

    PNG is a lossless format. If you resize down and re-encode, the new file may briefly grow due to encoder differences, but the pixel count is smaller. Switching the output format to WebP usually results in a much smaller download.

  4. 04

    What is the best size for social media?

    A safe rule of thumb: 1200×630 for Facebook and LinkedIn share cards, 1080×1080 for Instagram square posts, 1080×1920 for Stories and Reels, 1280×720 for YouTube thumbnails. The resizer is happy to deliver any of these.

  5. 05

    Does the resizer respect EXIF orientation?

    Yes. Photos that were rotated using EXIF metadata are read with their proper orientation before being resized, so portrait shots stay portrait.

  6. 06

    Can I resize transparent PNGs?

    Absolutely. Transparency is preserved when the output format is PNG or WebP. Choosing JPG flattens the transparent areas to white because JPG cannot store alpha channels.

  7. 07

    Why does my resized output not match the typed pixel size?

    If you picked Fit mode, the longest side becomes the target and the shorter side is computed from the aspect ratio. To force exact dimensions, switch to Stretch mode, but be aware that this can distort the image.

  8. 08

    How does Raheg compare to desktop Photoshop for batch resizing?

    Raheg Smart Converter focuses on single-file, browser-fast resizing with predictable defaults. Photoshop remains superior for actions, droplets and CMYK print pipelines. Use Raheg when you need a quick pixel-perfect export without launching a full creative suite.

  9. 09

    Should I resize before or after colour correction?

    For photography, colour-grade first at full resolution, then resize once. Resizing before grading can amplify noise in lifted shadows. Raheg assumes you are handing off a file that is already colour-balanced for its destination.