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Image Export Guide

Learn how to export your AI-generated images with the perfect settings for any platform.

Platform Presets

We've created optimized presets for popular platforms to make exporting easy:

Raw

Full resolution, unprocessed image. Perfect for printing, archiving, or when you need maximum quality. This exports your image at the exact resolution and quality it was generated or upscaled to, without any additional processing.

Tinder (1080×1350)

Optimized for dating apps like Tinder. Vertical aspect ratio that works perfectly for profile photos. Keeps file size under most platform limits.

Bumble (1080×1440)

Slightly taller aspect ratio ideal for Bumble profiles. Ensures your photos look great in their app layout.

Hinge / Instagram (1080×1080)

Square format perfect for Instagram posts and Hinge profiles. The most versatile aspect ratio.

LinkedIn (1584×1584)

Higher resolution square format for professional networking. Looks sharp on both desktop and mobile.

Custom

Enter your own dimensions. Great for specific use cases or platforms with unique requirements. Leave one dimension blank to maintain aspect ratio.

Image Formats

Choose the right format for your needs:

JPEG (Recommended)

  • ✓ Best for most uses - Small file size with great quality
  • ✓ Universal compatibility - Works everywhere
  • ✓ Adjustable quality - Balance file size vs image quality
  • ✓ Fast uploads - Smaller files upload quickly
  • ⚠ Lossy compression (some detail lost at lower quality settings)

PNG

  • ✓ Perfect quality - Lossless, no quality loss
  • ✓ Best for printing - Maximum detail preserved
  • ⚠ Large file sizes - Typically 2-3× larger than JPEG
  • ⚠ Slower uploads - May exceed platform size limits (10MB+)
  • ⚠ No quality setting (always 100%)

WebP

  • ✓ Excellent compression - Smallest file sizes
  • ✓ Adjustable quality - Similar to JPEG control
  • ✓ Modern format - Better quality per byte than JPEG
  • ⚠ Limited compatibility - Some older apps/devices don't support it
  • ⚠ Not ideal for professional printing

Quality Settings

For JPEG and WebP formats, you can adjust quality from 1-100%:

High Quality (85-100%)

Excellent image quality with minimal compression artifacts. Best for professional use, portfolios, or when quality is more important than file size. Files will be larger.

Medium Quality (60-84%)

Good balance between quality and file size. Perfect for social media, dating apps, and online profiles. Most users won't notice any quality difference. Recommended for most uses.

Lower Quality (1-59%)

Smaller file sizes but visible compression artifacts. Only use when you need the smallest possible file or have strict size limits. Not recommended for profile photos.

💡 Tip: Our export dialog shows an estimated file size as you adjust settings. Use this to find the sweet spot between quality and file size for your needs.

File Size Considerations

Different platforms have different file size limits:

Tinder / Bumble / Hinge:~10 MB limit
Instagram:8 MB limit
LinkedIn:8 MB limit
Twitter/X:5 MB limit

⚠️ Important: If you export the Raw preset with high resolution (especially upscaled images), the file may be too large for some platforms. The estimated size helps you stay within limits. Choose a platform preset (like "Tinder" or "Instagram") to automatically get the right size.

Quick Recommendations

👍 For Dating Apps

Use the platform preset (Tinder, Bumble, Hinge), JPEG format, 80-90% quality

Result: ~2-4 MB files that look great and upload quickly

💼 For Professional Use

Use LinkedIn preset, JPEG format, 90-95% quality

Result: ~4-6 MB files with excellent quality for business profiles

📱 For Social Media

Use Instagram preset, JPEG format, 75-85% quality

Result: ~1-3 MB files perfect for Instagram, Facebook, Twitter

🖨️ For Printing

Use Raw preset, PNG format (no quality setting)

Result: Maximum quality, larger files (15-40 MB) with zero quality loss

Privacy: Strip EXIF Data

EXIF data is metadata embedded in images that can include:

  • • Camera settings and model
  • • Date and time the photo was taken
  • • GPS location data (where the photo was taken)
  • • Software used to edit the image

We recommend leaving "Strip EXIF data" enabled to protect your privacy, especially for public uploads. This removes all metadata while keeping the image quality intact.