Free Pixel Art Maker

Turn any picture into pixel art in seconds. Pick a grid size and color depth, download a crisp PNG — or open it in Repixel to color it by number, tap by tap.

Picture → Pixel Art

Free · no sign-up · your image is processed on our servers and deleted within an hour.
Grid size
Color depth

How to turn a picture into pixel art

  1. Upload a photo. Drag a picture onto the uploader above, or tap it to pick a file. Works with portraits, pets, landscapes, food, and logos.
  2. Pick a grid size. A smaller grid (32×32) gives a chunky, retro look. A larger grid (64 or 96) preserves more detail. Balanced 48×48 is a good default.
  3. Pick a color depth. Fewer colors read like classic 16-bit pixel art. More colors hold onto shading and skin tones.
  4. Download or color it in. Save the PNG to use anywhere — or tap “Open in Repixel” to color it pixel-by-pixel on your phone.

The whole process runs on our servers using the same pixel-art engine that powers the Repixel app, so what you see in your browser is exactly what you would see on the color-by-number board.

What photos make the best pixel art?

Photos convert into great pixel art when the subject is clear and the color palette is not too busy. A few rules of thumb:

  • High contrast beats high resolution. A 1-megapixel photo with a strong silhouette will pixelate better than a 20-megapixel photo shot into the sun.
  • Fill the frame with the subject. The maker center-crops your image to a square. If your dog is tiny in the corner, it will get even tinier after pixelation. Zoom in first.
  • Flat colors and graphic shapes shine. Cartoon stills, logos, food, and toys tend to look incredible. Low-light photos with heavy noise tend to look muddy — try boosting contrast before uploading.
  • Transparent PNGs keep their background. Upload a transparent PNG and the output will be transparent too, perfect for stickers and overlays.

If your first result looks off, try a bigger grid or a higher color depth. Pixel art is a conversation between resolution and palette — play with both.

Grid sizes, explained

The grid is how many pixels wide (and tall) your final image will be. On Repixel, the grid doubles as the color-by-number board — each square is a cell you can tap.

  • 32 × 32 — 1,024 cells. Chunky, game-sprite energy. Perfect for avatars, icons, and anything meant to look like a retro console.
  • 48 × 48 — 2,304 cells. The sweet spot for recognizable portraits without hours of tapping. Default for a reason.
  • 64 × 64 — 4,096 cells. Detail lives here. Faces keep their features, food looks appetizing, scenery holds up.
  • 96 × 96 — 9,216 cells. Near-photographic. Best for when you want pixel art that quietly wows instead of shouts.
  • 128 × 128 — 16,384 cells. Ultra mode. The lines between "pixel art" and "downsampled photo" get blurry. Pair with Ultra (36 colors) for portraits that still look like the person.

Larger grids are more detailed but take more time to color by number. Think of 32 as a 20-minute project, 96 as a weekend, 128 as a slow-burn display piece.

Pixel art vs. pixel drawing — what is the difference?

Pixel art traditionally means placing every pixel by hand at a small resolution — a craft tied to 8-bit and 16-bit video games, where memory limits forced artists to work one pixel at a time. Pixel drawing is a broader term people search for when they want to draw with pixels, whether they are making game sprites, icons, or digital posters — if that is what you are after, our free pixel drawing tool is a better starting point than a photo converter.

Modern pixel art almost always goes through three steps: reference, rough, and cleanup. A tool like this one handles the reference-to-rough jump in seconds. You can stop there and use the output, or treat it as a starting point for hand-tuning in an editor like Aseprite or Piskel.

If you are new to pixel art, the fastest way to build an eye for it is to color other people's pixel art first. Repixel lets you do exactly that — tap, color, and study how great pixel artists compose with 8–24 colors.

Color your pixel art by number in Repixel

The web maker is the fast route. The Repixel app is the fun route. Once your photo is pixelated, tap Open in Repixel and the same grid loads as a color-by-number board on your phone:

  • Every cell gets a number that matches a color in a legend at the bottom of the screen.
  • Tap a color, tap a cell, and the pixel fills in with a satisfying little pop.
  • When you finish a color, the whole palette celebrates — Repixel ties the ambient experience together.
  • Save progress, re-share the finished piece, and keep a library of every pixel art you have ever colored.

Get Repixel free on the App Store

Frequently asked questions

Is the pixel art maker really free?

Yes — no sign-up, no watermark, no paywall. Download the PNG and do whatever you want with it.

Can I use the pixel art commercially?

Yes, assuming you own the rights to the original photo. The conversion itself is yours to keep and license.

Does this work on iPhone and Android?

The web tool works on any modern browser — phone, tablet, or desktop. The full color-by-number experience (with tap-to-color) is a free iPhone app.

Are my photos stored anywhere?

The pixelated PNG lives on our CDN for one hour so you have time to download it, then it is deleted. We do not keep the original photo.

What resolution should I upload?

Between 500×500 and 4000×4000 is ideal. Very small images lose detail in pixelation, and very large ones just get downsized without any quality gain.

Why does my pixel art look grainy?

Low-light or compressed photos carry noise that the pixelator picks up. Try increasing the color depth, or lightly editing your photo for contrast before uploading.