Resize your image to 35x50 mm for portrait document photos, compact headshots, profile cards, and other small upright image layouts.
Drag & drop or click to select your image (Max 20MB)
Supports JPG, PNG, GIF, WebP formats
A measured portrait size for profile images, document-style photos, and compact formal prints.
35x50 mm gives you an upright format that suits face-centered images, profile photos, and other compact portrait layouts.
When a printed image must fit a specific portrait area, setting the exact size first helps avoid unnecessary trial and error later.
This size can work for profile cards, small portrait inserts, and document-style images where an upright crop makes more sense than a wide one.
Small portrait photos like this are often arranged in multiples on one larger sheet and trimmed after printing.
The size stays small enough for practical use while still giving enough room for a clear portrait when the source image is prepared well.
You can resize personal portrait images locally in the browser before using them in a print or submission workflow.
Upload your image, set the exact 35x50 mm size, and export a file that is ready for printing or placement.
Open the photo, label art, card insert, or graphic you want to fit into a 35x50 mm layout.
Set the dimensions to 35x50 mm, review the crop and orientation, and adjust the DPI if you need a sharper print.
Export the resized image and place it into your print sheet, insert card, product layout, or other small-format workflow.
Create a clean 35x50 mm file for small print pieces, inserts, labels, stickers, or compact photo layouts in just a few steps.
Resize to 35x50 mmEverything you need to know about resizing images to 35x50 mm
At 300 DPI, 35x50 mm is about 413x591 pixels. At 150 DPI, it is about 207x295 pixels. The best choice depends on how sharp you want the final print to look.
35x50 mm works well for profile photos, document-style images, compact headshots, and other portrait layouts that need a controlled physical size.
35x50 mm uses a 7:10 portrait ratio, giving a tall frame that suits face-centered photos and upright identification-style layouts.
300 DPI is a reliable option for crisp print quality. 150 DPI can still work for proofs, mockups, or less demanding print use.
Yes. It is practical to print multiple copies on a larger sheet and trim them after output.
It can work for profile inserts, portrait cards, and some formal photo uses where a compact upright shape is preferred.
JPG is good for portraits, PNG is useful in designed layouts, and TIFF can be chosen when a print workflow needs a higher-quality source.
Yes. The image is resized locally in your browser, so your file stays on your device while you adjust the dimensions and download the result.
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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