Resize Image to 1.5 MB
A 1.5 MB target is useful for case study covers and large editorial hero images that need to look polished while still becoming easier to publish and share.
Upload Your Image
Drag & drop or click to select your image (Max 20MB)
Supports JPG, PNG, GIF, WebP formats
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1.5 MB Resizing for Case Study and Editorial Covers
Keep lead visuals clearer for storytelling pages, project summaries, and long-form content without holding onto oversized exports.
Stronger Lead Image Quality
A 1.5 MB file gives room for a hero image to carry more texture and contrast. That helps opening visuals support the story instead of feeling overly compressed.
Better for Textured Scenes
Editorial and project imagery can include screens, workspaces, hands, or product details. This target helps those surfaces stay more natural and less smeared.
Good for Storytelling Layouts
Long-form pages often rely on a strong opening image to set the tone. A 1.5 MB target balances that visual role with a more practical file size.
Helpful for Iterative Publishing
Case study pages often change title treatments, crops, or visual emphasis. Local export makes it easy to adjust the hero image as the story evolves.
Balanced Format Options
You can compare JPG and WebP to see which format supports the story image better. Some scenes hold up more cleanly in one format than the other.
Private Draft Control
Unpublished project visuals remain on your device during resizing. That helps keep client work and internal drafts private while the page is still being built.
Create a 1.5 MB Image in 3 Steps
Upload the cover image, enter the target, and export a cleaner version for case studies, long-form pages, or editorial use.
Upload the Cover Image
Choose the hero image or project visual you want to optimize for a case study, article, or portfolio page.
Set the Goal to 1.5 MB
Enter 1.5 in MB mode and adjust the format or dimensions if needed to improve the final look.
Export and Place It
Download the resized image and review it in the page layout where it will be used.
Resize to 1.5 MB
Prepare cleaner case study covers and editorial hero images with a 1.5 MB target that keeps the visual story strong.
Resize to 1.5 MBFAQ for 1.5 MB Image Resizing
Answers for editorial covers, project previews, and storytelling images targeting 1.5 MB.
A hero image often does more visual work than a small supporting image. A 1.5 MB target can preserve more texture and depth while still cutting down a heavy original export.
Yes, especially when the opening visual needs to feel polished and detailed. It is often a good middle point between full-size originals and aggressive compression.
Sometimes. If the original is much larger than the published display area, a slight dimension reduction can improve results and help reach the target more gracefully.
They often can, though screenshots with tiny interface text may need careful review. Sharp interface elements are sensitive, so compare a few settings when needed.
WebP often gives stronger efficiency, while JPG can be easier to reuse in a wide range of editorial and documentation workflows.
Yes. The local workflow makes repeated exports easy, which is useful when layouts and headlines shift during page preparation.
The tool will not enlarge it to hit the target. You can keep the lighter file or test another format if you want a different visual result.
Yes. The file is resized in your browser, so unpublished case study and editorial assets stay on your device during editing.
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.
Popular resize presets
Jump to the most commonly used image sizes for your projects