Get a clean, square product image that fits every marketplace. Center the product, leave a consistent margin, and export at the resolution your store needs.
Upload Image
Drag & drop or click to upload
Supports PNG, JPG, WebP, GIF, BMP
Drop in your product shot. A clean white background is ideal — it crops cleaner and meets most marketplace rules.
Lock the aspect to 1:1 and frame the product so it fills 80–90% of the canvas with even margins on all four sides.
Choose 1000×1000 for marketplace minimums, 2000×2000 for zoom support, or 2048×2048 for Shopify's full-size cap.
Export as JPG (smaller file, ideal for marketplaces) or PNG (best when you need a transparent background).
Recommended but not always required. Amazon and Walmart require a pure white #FFFFFF background for the main listing image. Etsy, Shopify, and eBay allow any background but reward consistent backgrounds with better feed performance. White also crops cleaner and reduces visual noise in grid layouts.
Almost every marketplace either requires or defaults to square: Amazon, eBay, Etsy, Shopify (Dawn theme), Instagram Shop, Facebook Marketplace, TikTok Shop. Cropping square once gives you a single asset that works everywhere. Non-square images get center-cropped automatically — and you lose control over what's visible.
1000×1000 is the baseline across most platforms. For zoom and hover-zoom features you need 2000×2000 (Amazon, eBay) or 2048×2048 (Shopify). High-resolution images also rank better in marketplace search, since the algorithm favors listings that load full zoom.
Use diffused natural light from a large window (overcast days are best) or two softbox lights at 45° angles. Avoid harsh direct sun or single point lights — they create deep shadows that crop badly. For small items, a $20 lightbox kit with a white sweep background usually beats DIY lighting.
Reflective items (jewelry, electronics, glass) catch every nearby surface. Shoot with a large white surface in front of the product to bounce clean light, wear dark clothing so you don't appear in the reflection, and consider polarizing filters. After cropping, you can clean residual reflections with a dedicated retoucher, but cropping itself won't fix reflections.