A 1.1 MB target works well for email headers and newsletter covers that need stronger detail than small web graphics but still must stay practical to send and preview.
Drag & drop or click to select your image (Max 20MB)
Supports JPG, PNG, GIF, WebP formats
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Keep campaign artwork neat, readable, and easier to load across inbox previews, desktop clients, and mobile devices.
A 1.1 MB goal gives email teams a predictable file size for recurring sends. It helps creative assets stay polished without adding more weight than a header image usually needs.
Newsletter banners often combine photo backgrounds and small lines of text. This file size leaves room for clearer lettering, softer gradients, and fewer distracting compression marks.
Brand washes and soft background fades are common in email art. A 1.1 MB target gives these areas more room to stay smooth and professional in preview windows.
If marketing copy or crops change late, you can test another version immediately in the browser. There is no upload queue slowing down last-minute edits.
Try JPG for broad compatibility or WebP when you want stronger efficiency. Comparing both exports often helps campaign teams find a cleaner final balance.
Draft newsletter art can stay on your device while you resize it. That keeps unfinished campaign materials private during review and export.
Upload the file, set the target, and export a campaign-ready version that keeps the look you need.
Open your JPG, PNG, or WebP newsletter graphic and review how the crop looks before you change the file size.
Switch to MB mode, type 1.1, and adjust format or image dimensions if the preview needs a better balance.
Download the resized file and place it in your email design. If needed, run one more pass with small adjustments.
Prepare newsletter headers and campaign art with a 1.1 MB target. Keep the image clean, controlled, and easy to deliver.
Resize to 1.1 MBAnswers for email visuals, newsletter covers, and other designs using a 1.1 MB target.
It gives the image more room than smaller web targets, which helps with text overlays and smooth backgrounds. At the same time, it still keeps the file lighter than many original exports.
Yes, it is often a useful middle ground for large email banners. It can keep stronger detail than a strict KB cap while remaining manageable for routine campaign work.
If the source is much larger than your email layout, reducing dimensions first often gives a cleaner result. Smaller visual changes usually work better than pushing compression too hard.
In many cases, yes. WebP often reaches the same visual quality with a smaller file, though JPG can still be the safer choice if compatibility matters most.
It often can, especially if the original file is strong and the text has good contrast. You should still check the preview because fine lettering always depends on the source design.
The tool does not enlarge the image to match the target. You can keep the current result or test another format if you want a different appearance.
Yes. Because the process runs locally, it is easy to test alternate crops, quality levels, or formats without waiting for repeated uploads.
Yes. The file stays in your browser during processing, so draft campaign artwork remains on your device while you work.
Yes. You can resize and download images for free, with no signup required. Processing happens locally in your browser, so there are no usage caps or hidden fees.
No. All resizing and compression run in your browser. Files never leave your device and are not stored on our servers, keeping your images private.
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