Image Tools for Conversion, Compression, Resizing, and Creation

Image tools on Gouho bring together online utilities for changing formats, reducing file size, resizing dimensions, creating simple graphics, and finding visually related images. This category supports practical jobs such as converting PNG to JPG, preparing WEBP files for the web, turning HEIC photos into more widely used formats, creating favicons, building memes, or starting with a reverse image lookup.

As a category page, this collection is meant to guide users toward the right task-specific tool instead of pushing every image job into one generic workflow. That makes the page useful both for quick format changes and for higher-intent tasks like image optimization, lightweight graphic creation, and visual discovery.

What you can do in this category

  • Convert images between common formats, including JPG, PNG, WEBP, SVG, HEIC, and AVIF.
  • Reduce file weight or change image dimensions before uploading to a website, store, app, or document.
  • Create simple visual assets such as favicons, memes, GIFs, and text-based images.
  • Use reverse image search when the goal is discovery, verification, or finding related versions of an image rather than editing it.

Choose the right image tool by task

Format conversion

When the main job is changing file type, start with a direct converter. This category includes focused paths such as PNG to JPG, JPG to PNG, WEBP to PNG, PNG to WEBP, HEIC to JPG, HEIC to PNG, AVIF to JPG, AVIF to PNG, SVG to PNG, and SVG to JPG. For broader format needs, users can move into Jpg Converter or SVG Converter.

This is the right route when compatibility is the problem. It is especially useful when an image has to meet a platform requirement, open correctly on another device, or move from a newer or specialized format into a more common one.

Optimization and sizing

Not every image problem is a format problem. If the file already opens correctly but is too heavy or too large, the better next click is usually Image Compressor or Image Resizer. Compression helps when page weight, upload limits, or storage efficiency matter. Resizing is the better fit when the image needs different pixel dimensions for a layout, card, thumbnail, banner, or profile area.

Keeping those two jobs separate improves decision quality. A smaller file size does not automatically mean the image dimensions are correct, and a resized image does not automatically mean the file is light enough for the intended destination.

Creation, lookup, and lightweight graphics

Some users are not trying to edit an existing image at all. They may need to generate a new one, turn a short clip into a shareable GIF, build a site icon, or create something made for social posting. This category supports those paths through Text To Image, Favicon Generator, Meme Generator, Video to GIF, and Reverse Image Search.

These tools serve different goals from converters and compressors. Reverse image search helps with identification and discovery. Text-to-image and meme generation help with creating new visuals. Favicon generation supports small brand or site assets. Video-to-GIF serves short, loopable visual content rather than still-image optimization.

How to choose the right next click

  • If transparency matters, a PNG path is usually more appropriate than a JPG path.
  • If the image is a photo, JPG or WEBP often makes more sense than SVG.
  • If the asset is a logo, icon, or simple shape, SVG-related paths can be more relevant than photo-focused formats.
  • If the goal is smaller file size, choose compression before assuming conversion alone will solve the problem.
  • If the goal is exact display dimensions, choose resizing even when the file format is already correct.
  • If the source image is HEIC or AVIF, convert first so the file fits more common publishing and sharing workflows.
  • If the task is discovery rather than editing, go directly to reverse image search instead of a converter.

One common mistake is treating raster-to-vector conversion as a universal fix. Tools such as PNG to SVG and JPG to SVG are most suitable when the image has clean edges, simple forms, or logo-like shapes. They are less appropriate when the source is a detailed photo with complex texture and tonal variation.

One practical example

A typical category-level workflow starts with an iPhone product photo that needs to go on a website. The first task is compatibility, so the user would begin with HEIC to JPG. If the file is still too heavy for the page, the next step is Image Compressor. If the image also needs to match a card or gallery size, the final step is Image Resizer. That sequence works better than forcing one tool to handle three different jobs at once.